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Selected Hawaiian Language Newspaper Articles Relating to Wildfires in 1877 and 1901

Dates

Publication Date
Time Period
1877
Time Period
1901

Citation

Alyssa N. Kamanu, 2023, Selected Hawaiian Language Newspaper Articles Relating to Wildfires in 1877 and 1901: U.S. Geological Survey Data Release. https://doi.org/10.21429/7M8G-RY76

Summary

Wildfire is a dominant ridge to reef threat to human and natural communities in the Hawaiian Islands, with impacts to natural and cultural resources and ecoystem services. Fire regimes in Hawaii have shifted from very infrequent wildfire occurrence prior to human arrival to greatly increased frequency, intensity, and size over the past 100+ years, almost all of which is driven by anthropogenic ignitions and wildland fuels associated with invasive species, particularly grasses. Recent fire science has greatly increased understanding of contemporary drivers of fire in Hawaii; however, the social dimensions and historical perspectives from Hawaiian language primary sources have not been integrated into synthetic understanding of fire [...]

Contacts

Originator :
Alyssa N Kamanu
Point of Contact :
Alyssa N Kamanu
Metadata Contact :
Alyssa N Kamanu
Distributor :
GS ScienceBase, U.S. Geological Survey
Funding Agency :
National CASC

Attached Files

Click on title to download individual files attached to this item.

Metadata-Hawaii-Wildfires-Newspapers.xml
Original FGDC Metadata

View
14.57 KB application/fgdc+xml
Selected Hawaiian language newspaper articles relating to wildfires in 1877 and 1901.csv 6.5 KB text/csv

Purpose

This dataset is an annotated bibliography of selected historical Hawaiian language newspaper articles relating to two wildfire events in the Hawaiian Islands in 1877 and 1901: an 1877 fire in the Kealia and Kapaa area of the Kawaihau district on the island of Kauai, and a 1901 fire in the Hamakua area on Hawaii Island. Newspaper articles were identified and selected for information in 10 categories of wildfire themes: fire ignitions, weather, vegetation burned, fire locations and extent, place names, fire behavior, environmental and financial impacts, human activities in response to fire, social perceptions of fire, and Hawaiian language words used to describe fire parameters.

Map

Communities

  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers
  • Pacific Islands CASC

Tags

Provenance

Data source
Input directly

Additional Information

Citation Extension

citationTypeData Release
parts
typeDOI
valuehttps://doi.org/10.21429/7M8G-RY76

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