Unlike most national parks, main access to Voyageurs National Park is by boat. This remote system of interconnected waterways along the USA-Canada border was an important transportation route for thousands of years of American Indian occupation, leading up to and including the trade route of the voyageurs, or French-Canadian fur traders from around 1680 to 1870. The Ojibwe people collaborated with the voyageurs and the two cultures developed a trade network that continued to rely on these waterways. By the mid-1800s, European fashion changed, and the fur trade dwindled while the Ojibwe remained tied to the land and waters. The complexity of the waterways increased with the installation of dams on two of the natural lakes in the early 1900s. Modern water levels have affected—and in some cases destabilized—vulnerable landforms within the past century. The knowledge of these effects can be used by resource managers to weigh the consequences of hydrologic manipulation in Voyageurs National Park.
Citation Information
Publication Year | 2018 |
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Title | A history of trade routes and water-level regulation on waterways in Voyageurs National Park, Minnesota, USA |
DOI | 10.1061/9780784481394.014 |
Authors | Victoria G. Christensen, Andrew E. LaBounty |
Publication Type | Conference Paper |
Publication Subtype | Conference Paper |
Index ID | 70197732 |
Record Source | USGS Publications Warehouse |
USGS Organization | Minnesota Water Science Center |