The ancient use ofPinus sylvestris L. (Scots pine) inner bark by Sami people in northern Sweden, related to cultural and ecological factors

O Zackrisson, L Östlund, O Korhonen… - Vegetation history and …, 2000 - Springer
A multidisciplinary study of use by Sami people of Pinus sylvestris L.(Scots pine) inner bark
was performed in northern Sweden. We combined linguistic, historical and archaeological …

A dendroecological reconstruction of use by Saami of Scots Pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) inner bark over the last 350 years at Sädvajaure, N. Sweden

M Niklasson, O Zackrisson, L Östlund - Vegetation history and …, 1994 - Springer
The historical use of Scots Pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) inner bark by the Saami near Lake
Sädvajaure, N. Sweden was studied with dendro-ecological methods. Damming of the lake …

Bark-peeling, food stress and tree spirits–the use of pine inner bark for food in Scandinavia and North America

L Östlund, L Ahlberg, O Zackrisson… - Journal of …, 2009 - journals.sagepub.com
The Sami people of northern Scandinavia and many indigenous peoples of North America
have used pine (Pinus spp.) inner bark for food, medicine and other purposes. This study …

The use of plants as regular food in ancient Subarctic economies: a case study based on Sami use of Scots pine innerbark

I Bergman, L Östlund, O Zackrisson - Arctic anthropology, 2004 - aa.uwpress.org
This study combines ethnological, historical, and dendroecological data from areas north of
the Arctic Circle to analyze cultural aspects of Sami use of Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) …

Trees for food–a 3000 year record of subarctic plant use

L Östlund, I Bergman, O Zackrisson - Antiquity, 2004 - cambridge.org
The authors present a unique long record of inner bark use by the Sami people of northern
Scandinavia extending back to 2800 BP. Consistent patterns with respect to the direction …

Traces of past Sami forest use: an ecological study of culturally modified trees and earlier land use within a boreal forest reserve

L Östlund, TS Ericsson, O Zackrisson… - … journal of forest …, 2003 - Taylor & Francis
The Samis have been present in the Swedish boreal forest for a long time. Their land‐use
practices were dominant over vast tracts until the late nineteenth century, but little is known …

Trees on the border between nature and culture: culturally modified trees in boreal Sweden

L Östlund, O Zackrisson, G Hörnberg - Environmental history, 2002 - journals.uchicago.edu
Throughout history, people around the world have scarred, shaped, and used living trees for
cultural purposes. Because trees can live for centuries,“culturally modified trees”(CMTs) that …

Carved trees in grazed forests in boreal Sweden—analysis of remaining trees, interpretation of past land-use and implications for conservation

R Andersson, L Östlund, R Lundqvist - Vegetation History and …, 2005 - Springer
Culturally modified trees (CMTs) provide unique insights into traditional knowledge and
uses of the forest ecosystems. In close relation to pre-industrial livestock herding in central …

Dendroecological studies in forest and fire history.

M Niklasson - 2000 - elibrary.ru
Degree: Skogl. Dr. DegreeYear: 1998 Institute: Sveriges Lantbruksuniversitet (Sweden)
Publisher: Sveriges Lantbruksuniversitet, Box 7071, S-750 07 Uppsala, Sweden …

Did Neanderthals eat inner bark?

DM Sandgathe, B Hayden - Antiquity, 2003 - cambridge.org
Did Neanderthals eat inner bark? Page 1 R esearch 709 Did Neanderthals eat inner bark?
Dennis M. Sandgathe*1 & Brian Hayden* Using ethnographic parallels the authors identify ‘bark …