Item Detail
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19947
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0
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17
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English
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Tracking the Kaibab Deer Into Western History
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Western Historical Quarterly
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Winter 2008
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39
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4
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Logan, UT
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Oxford University Press
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413-438
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In the 1920s, an overpopulation of deer on Arizona's Kaibab Plateau helped inspire scientific and popular stories about the balance of nature. This essay examines other stories about the deer—ones told by Southern Paiutes, Mormon settlers, and national tourists—to understand the cultural creation of innocence in the West.
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A History of Southern Utah and Its National Parks
Building the City of God : Community and Cooperation among the Mormons
Ecology, Resource Redistribution, and Mormon Settlement in Northeastern Arizona
Jacob Hamblin : A Narrative of His Personal Experience
Journal of the Southern Indian Mission : Diary of Thomas D. Brown
Making Space on the Western Frontier : Mormons, Miners, and Southern Paiutes
Over the Rim : the Parley P. Pratt Exploring Expedition to Southern Utah, 1849-1850
Personal Memories of the United Order of Orderville, Utah
Saints of Sage and Saddle : Folklore among the Mormons
Samuel Claridge : Pioneering the Outposts of Zion
Stewardship and Enterprise : The LDS Church and the Wasatch Oasis Environment, 1847-1930
The Diary of Charles Lowell Walker
The Legacy of Conquest : The Unbroken Past of the American West
The Mormon Experience : A History of the Latter-day Saints
The Orderville United Order of Zion
Transformation of the Mormon Culture Region
Utah's Black Hawk War