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Summer, 2007
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CONTRIBUTORS


JAN BOLES is a photographer, editor, and archivist whose award-winning photographs are included in permanent collections throughout the intermountain west. He now directs the Robert E. Smylie Archives at Albertson College of Idaho, Caldwell.

 
R. SCOTT BYRAM holds a Ph.D. in anthropology from the University of Oregon. His research and writing centers on the Pacific Northwest and includes Native American heritage and restoration archaeology, indigenous geographies, wetland archaeology, stone tool technology, tidewater fishing practices, and coastal landscape change. He is currently an archaeological consultant and serves as a visiting scholar with the Archaeological Research Facility at the University of California, Berkeley.

 
FREDERICK H. HILL was born in Elgin and attended Eastern Oregon University and the California School of Fine Arts, where he studied with Ansel Adams. Between 1948 and 1986, he worked as a commercial photographer and exhibited fine art photography and published his documentary images. In 1989, he returned to Union County where his free lance work has received various awards.

 
JOAN HOCKADAY is a garden historian and member of the board of the Friends of Seattle's Olmsted Parks. She is the author of The Gardens of San Francisco (Timber Press, Portland), and is currently working on a manuscript about John Charles Olmsted in the Pacific Northwest.

 
MELINDA MARIE JETTÉ received her Ph.D. in history from the University of British Columbia. She is an assistant professor of history at Franklin Pierce University in New Hampshire, where she is currently developing a new minor in public history for undergraduate students.

 
ROBERT J. LOSEY received his Ph.D. from the University of Oregon and is an assistant professor of anthropology at the University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada. His areas of expertise are in zooarchaeology, the archaeology of natural disasters, the evolution of social complexity among hunter-gatherers, and maritime adaptations across the globe. He conducts research on the America's Northwest coast and in Siberia.

 
JASON T. YOUNKER is an assistant professor of anthropology at Rocherster Institute of Technology in Rochester, New York. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Oregon in 2003, with a dissertation entitled "Coquille/K'Kwell, A Southern Oregon Coast Indian Tribe: Revisiting History, Ingenuity, and Identity." He is a member of the Coquille Indian Tribe of North Bend, Oregon, and grew up on South Slough of Coos Bay.

 
SHIROD YOUNKER (Miluk/Coquille) is art program panager of the Journey's In Creativity: Explorations in Native American Art & Culture program at Oregon College of Art & Craft. He received a B.F.A. from Oregon State University in 2000. He works with various mediums, often depicting pre-contact and removal era scenery of Southern Oregon Coastal Native Americans. Shirod is a member of the Coquille Indian Tribe and grew up on South Slough of Coos Bay, Oregon.

 
GEORGE VENN is a northwest poet, editor, and literary historian. Professor of English and Writer-in-Residence emeritus at Eastern Oregon University, Venn is the author of five books and editor of fifteen other works, including a historical anthology of Oregon writing, The Oregon Literature Series (1993–1994). His most recent book is Soldier to Advocate: C.E.S. Wood's 1877 Legacy (Wordcraft of Oregon, 2006).

 
PATRICIA WHEREAT PHILLIPS, or Milluk ancestry, is a former cultural resources program coordinator for the Confederated Tribes of Coos, Lower Umpqua and Siuslaw Indians. She holds a M.A. in linguistics from the University of Oregon. Her current research projects include a volume on Oregon coast ethnobotany and transcription of the John P. Harrington manuscripts at the Smithsonian Institution.  


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