TY - JOUR
T1 - The oldest new woodland on earth
T2 - Recognising, mapping, naming and narrating the great western woodlands1
AU - Vlachos, Alexandra
AU - Gaynor, Andrea
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 International Journal of Secondary Metabolite. All rights reserved.
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - The Great Western Woodlands (GWW) cover an area of 160,000 km2 of largely intact semi-arid woodland in inland south-western Australia. The highly biodiverse GWW is a large-scale ecosystem and a refuge for native species endangered elsewhere, but faces many challenges, including poor fire management, mining and mining exploration impacts, proposed clearing for agriculture, introduced species and climate change. This paper traces the way in which stories about the region have powerfully shaped different groups' dealings with it. In Western Australia, settler society's long-standing focus on the agricultural zone of the Wheatbelt and the mineral wealth of the goldfields as 'productive' landscapes produced a dominant narrative about conquering nature, physical labour and economic wealth that marginalised the ecologies and First Peoples of the GWW. More recently, a network of local settler and Indigenous people, NGOs, scientists and conservationists have begun to produce a new narrative with the cultural and natural values of the woodland at its heart, as a foundation for better understanding, managing and protecting the GWW. Reflecting on the historical framing of a particular region reveals the important cultural-ecological work performed by regional narratives.
AB - The Great Western Woodlands (GWW) cover an area of 160,000 km2 of largely intact semi-arid woodland in inland south-western Australia. The highly biodiverse GWW is a large-scale ecosystem and a refuge for native species endangered elsewhere, but faces many challenges, including poor fire management, mining and mining exploration impacts, proposed clearing for agriculture, introduced species and climate change. This paper traces the way in which stories about the region have powerfully shaped different groups' dealings with it. In Western Australia, settler society's long-standing focus on the agricultural zone of the Wheatbelt and the mineral wealth of the goldfields as 'productive' landscapes produced a dominant narrative about conquering nature, physical labour and economic wealth that marginalised the ecologies and First Peoples of the GWW. More recently, a network of local settler and Indigenous people, NGOs, scientists and conservationists have begun to produce a new narrative with the cultural and natural values of the woodland at its heart, as a foundation for better understanding, managing and protecting the GWW. Reflecting on the historical framing of a particular region reveals the important cultural-ecological work performed by regional narratives.
KW - Indigenous people
KW - Mediterranean-climate woodlands
KW - Mining
KW - Narrative
KW - Western Australia
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85120754643&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.22459/IREH.07.02.2021.05
DO - 10.22459/IREH.07.02.2021.05
M3 - Article
SN - 2205-3204
VL - 7
SP - 125
EP - 144
JO - International Review of Environmental History
JF - International Review of Environmental History
IS - 2
ER -