Big Sky Rivers
The Yellowstone and Upper Missouri
Robert Kelley Schneiders
October 2003
384 pages, 18 photographs, 6-1/8 x 9-1/4
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-1264-2, $35.00
Historically,
it is the land of the bison. But the land across which these powerful
herds once thundered has been transformed. We know it today by such
names as Montana, Wyoming, Dakota, western Iowa, and Nebraskabut
it is really buffalo country, the land of the big sky rivers.
This book is a tale of two rivers, a history of the majestic Missouri
and how it was once wedded to the Yellowstone. Though quite different
todayone dammed into reservoirs, the other unregulated with
a semblance of wildnessthey were once linked ecologically,
geographically, and historically. Then in the twentieth century,
Euro-Americans dismantled many of these connections and attempted
to uncouple
the streams.
Viewing the rivers and their surrounding lands as a living system,
Robert Kelley Schneiders focuses on four components within the Upper
Missouri bioregionthe Missouri River valley, the Yellowstone
River valley, Homo sapiens, and bisonto show the significance
of their interaction over the past two hundred years.
To frame his story, Schneiders goes back to the nineteenth-century
journals of fur traders and settlers, and in the record of flora,
fauna, floods, and human activity he finds evidence of rapid and
disruptive change. Bison once had the greatest influence on the
land, and Schneiders depicts an original bison and Indian trail
network on which were overlaid the first forts and towns and then
the railroads, highways, and reservoirs that reconfigured the region
forever.
Schneiders explains how these geographical constructs interacted
with larger demographic and economic trends in the twentieth-century
West, as dams and their resultant reservoirs enhanced the federal
presence in the Dakotas and eastern Montana. He describes human
encroachment on the rivers and tells why the Corps of Engineers
dammed the Missouri but spared the Yellowstone. The engineers and
their backers have so completely engineered the Missouri that few
people today think of it as anything other than water. But we can
reestablish our bonds to the river if we decide to let it flow once
again, argues Schneiders. Removing the dams on the Missouri is the
first step toward reasserting localism and grassroots democracy.
In what was once buffalo country, a dormant ecology awaits rebirth.
A major work of environmental history, Big Sky Rivers offers
a challenging vision for the future of the Upper Missouri bioregion.
An important and provocative study of how human aspiration
and cultural power changed a bioregion in North America. Evocatively
written and conceived, it forces readers to consider broad implications
of recent manipulations of the environment.--William
Lang, editor of Great River of the West: Essays on the
Columbia River
An exemplary bioregional history that is well researched
and well written.--Dan Flores, author of The Natural
West: Environmental History in the Great Plains and Rocky Mountains
ROBERT KELLY SCHNEIDERS is author of Unruly River: Two
Centuries of Change along the Missouri, also from Kansas. He
is a lecturer in U.S. history at the University of Minnesota.
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