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Show 607 (296) Jordan's view of Indians: Starr, Americans and the California Dream, p. 312. (297) "the wild wailing came . . .": Bade, II, p. 22. (297) Muir's description of the Modocs: "Modoc Memories . . . "; Kimes #38. (297) "I don't agree with you . . .": Muir Papers, Box 2; Jan. 10, 1873. (298) Thoreau's argument is in "Economy," Walden: George Perkins Marsh's in "The Study of Nature," Christian Examiner (Jan. 1860), pp. 34-35. (298) Patrick Delaney vs. the Mono Indians: "By-Ways of Yosemite Travel. Bloody Canon," pp. 271-272; Kimes #30. (299) "By-Ways . . . " was rewritten for Picturesque California and the new passage to which I refer is in West of the Rocky Mountains, pp. 45-46. (301) Man as more than visitor: John G. Mitchell considers but does not resolve this problem when he discusses "subsistence hunting" by Alaskan natives in Chapter 4, "Yunguaquaquq," The Hunt (New York: Knopf, 1980), pp. 149-204. (302) Aldo Leopold, "The Conservation Ethic," Journal of Forestry (October 1933); reprinted in The Ecological Conscience: Values for Survival (New Jersey: Prentice Hall, 1970), p. 46. (302) Leopold and European forestry: Susan Flader, Thinking Like a Mountain: Aldo Leopold and the Evolution of an Ecological Attitude toward Deer. Wolvesf and Forests |