The Traditional Ecological Knowledge of the Solega A Linguistic Perspective

(Dana P.) #1

240



  1. Ellen R. Processing Metroxylon sagu Rottboell (Arecaceae) as a technological complex: a
    case study from south central Seram, Indonesia. Econ Bot. 2004;58(4):601–25.

  2. Gadgil M, Berkes F, Folke C. Indigenous knowledge for biodiversity conservation. Ambio.
    1993;22(2-3):151–6.

  3. Silvano RAM, Begossi A. Local knowledge on a cosmopolitan fi sh: ethnoecology of
    Pomatomus saltatrix (Pomatomidae) in Brazil and Australia. Fish Res. 2005;71(1):43–59.

  4. Nombo P, Leach J. Reite plants: an ethnobotanical study in Tok Pisin and English. Canberra:
    Australian National University Press; 2010.

  5. Martin G. Ethnobotany: a methods manual. London: Chapman & Hall; 1995.

  6. Berkes F. Sacred ecology: traditional ecological knowledge and resource management.
    Philadelphia, PA: Taylor and Francis; 1999.

  7. Maffi L, editor. On biocultural diversity: linking language, knowledge and the environment.
    Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press; 2001.

  8. Anderson E, Pearsall D, Hunn E, Turner N, editors. Ethnobiology. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley;
    2011.

  9. Evans N. Sign metonymies and the problem of fl ora-fauna polysemy in Australian linguis-
    tics. In: Tyron D, Walsh M, editors. Boundary Rider. Essays in honour of Geoffrey O’Grady.
    Canberra: Pacifi c Linguistics; 1997.

  10. Waddy J. Classifi cation of plants and animals from a Groote Eylandt Aboriginal point of
    view. Darwin: Australian National University North Australia Research Unit; 1988.

  11. Telfer W, Garde M. Indigenous knowledge of rock kangaroo ecology in Western Arnhem
    Land, Australia. Hum Ecol. 2006;34(3):379–406.

  12. Himmelmann N. Documentary and descriptive linguistics. Linguistics. 1998;36(1):161–95.

  13. Crystal D. Language death. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2000.

  14. Nettle D, Romaine S. Vanishing voices: the extinction of the world’s languages. New York:
    Oxford University Press; 2000.

  15. Grenoble L, Whaley L, editors. Endangered languages: language loss and community
    response. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1998.

  16. Gippert J, Himmelmann N, Mosel U, editors. Essentials of language documentation. Berlin:
    Mouton de Gruyter; 2006.

  17. Thieberger N, editor. The Oxford handbook of linguistic fi eldwork. Oxford: Oxford
    University Press; 2011.

  18. McClatchey W. Ethnobiology - basic methods for documenting biological knowledge repre-
    sented in languages. In: Thieberger N, editor. The Oxford handbook of linguistic fi eldwork.
    Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2011.

  19. Berlin B. How a folkbotanical system can be both natural and comprehensive: one Maya
    Indian’s view of the plant world. In: Medin D, Atran S, editors. Folk biology. Cambridge:
    MIT Press; 1999.

  20. Evans N. In: Crystal D, editor. Dying words: endangered languages and what they have to tell
    us. Chichester: Wiley Blackwell; 2010.

  21. Garde M, Nadjamerrek BL, Kolkkiwarra M, Kalarriya J, Djandjomerr J, Birriyabirriya B,
    et al. The language of fi re: seasonality, resources and landscape burning on the Arnhem Land
    plateau. In: Russell-Smith J, Whitehead P, Cooke P, editors. Culture, ecology and economy
    of fi re management in North Australian Savannas. Canberra: CSIRO Publishing; 2009.
    p. 85–164.

  22. Majnep IS, Bulmer R. Animals the ancestors hunted. Adelaide: Crawford House; 2007.

  23. Majnep IS, Bulmer R. Birds of my Kalam Country. Auckland: Auckland University Press;
    1977.

  24. Dumbacher J, Beehier B, Spande T, Garraffo M, Daly J. Homobatrachotoxin in the genus
    Pitohui: chemical defense in birds? Science. 1992;258(5083):799–801.

  25. Nash D. Comparative fl ora terminology of the central Northern Territory. In: McConvell P,
    Evans N, editors. Archaeology and linguistics: aboriginal Australia in global perspective.
    Melbourne: Oxford University Press; 1997.


References
Free download pdf