People of the Pacific mountain system

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The Pacific mountain region had a large American Indian population before the arrival of white explorers and settlers. Hunting, the gathering of berries, roots, and nuts, and fishing were the major economic activities. Trade and barter were common among tribes, especially in the north, where peoples from the interior traded hides, meat, and roots for salmon caught by the coastal peoples.

The Spanish were the first Europeans in the region. They moved northward, establishing missions throughout California to just north of San Francisco Bay. The first whites in the northern areas were fur trappers and traders. These early contacts had profound effects on the lives of the native peoples. Many of the California Indians were put on missions, where they became farmers and pastoralists. The fur trade introduced a number of useful manufactured goods, notably firearms and blankets. Contact with whites, however, introduced such European diseases as smallpox, scarlet fever, and measles, for which the Indians had little immunity: much of the Indian population was wiped out in a short period of time.

From the 1830s an increasing flood of whites poured into the region, many of them farmers who settled in the Fraser River valley, Puget Sound Lowland, and Willamette River valley. By the end of the 19th century, the region’s modern settlement pattern had been established, with most of the Indians on reservations and the economy dominated by the logging and lumber industry.

Economy

Resource exploitation

The abundant precipitation and deep, weathered soils of the coastal ranges from the Queen Charlotte Islands through the Klamath Mountains and into northern California produce the largest softwood lumber trees in the world. The completion of railroads into the region in the 1880s, giving it access to other parts of the country, made possible the large-scale commercial exploitation of these forests. The opening of the Panama Canal in 1914 stimulated the movement of lumber by ship. Wholesale cutting of these lands ensued. The coastal ranges, most of which were privately owned, were virtually cleared of their old-growth (virgin) forests. The Canadian Coast Mountains and the Cascade Range were the last areas to be logged, because their greater inaccessibility made it more difficult to cut and transport the timber.

Mining and the extraction of oil and natural gas are of some economic importance. Historically, the Canadian Coast Mountains, North Cascades, and Klamath Mountains were important sources for gold, while the first oil well in California was drilled in 1865 on the state’s northern coast. Sand and gravel are now the major nonfuel minerals mined.

Although the Columbia River basin is the main focus of hydroelectric development in the region, the abundant precipitation, large drop in elevation, and deep, wide glacial valleys for water storage also have made possible hydroelectric development in the Canadian Coast Mountains and North Cascades. Two notable schemes are the harnessing of the Skagit River northeast of Seattle, Washington, and the generating station at Kemano, on the coast of British Columbia, that supplies power for an aluminum smelter at nearby Kitimat.

Agriculture and fishing

Agriculture is important in some of the valleys within the ranges. From southern British Columbia to northern California, dairying and egg production are leading activities. Some of California’s most important vineyards are in the Coast Ranges near San Francisco, notably the Napa and Sonoma valleys to the north. The Salinas Valley south of San Francisco and the Central Valley to the east are two of the leading vegetable-producing areas in the United States.

Fishing once was a major activity along the entire Pacific coast. Salmon fishing was dominant from British Columbia to northern California, while tuna and sardines were important in southern California. Overfishing, pollution, and (for the anadromous salmon) destruction of the natural spawning habitat have seriously depleted fish stocks and reduced the importance of commercial fishing. Salmon farming has become significant, however, especially in British Columbia.

Recreation

The Pacific mountain system is one of North America’s great playgrounds. Large numbers of tourists and outdoors enthusiasts are attracted to the region’s magnificent scenery and its varied, year-round recreational opportunities. More than a dozen national parks, monuments, and recreation areas are scattered throughout the ranges, as well as dozens of provincial, state, and county parks. Vast national forest lands in the United States also provide campsites and recreation areas. Some of North America’s best Nordic and Alpine skiing facilities are found in the region, often in close proximity to large urban areas.

Environmental concerns

The almost rainless summers in all but the most northerly part of the region make fire a constant threat. Although some fires are started by natural causes (mainly lightning), many are caused by human carelessness, as, for example, the great Tillamook Burn in Oregon in 1933.

The logging practice of clear-cutting left millions of acres of denuded mountainsides. Exposed hillsides were subject to heavy erosion, and one result was the deposition of sediment on the gravel spawning beds used by salmon. The removal of forest cover also eliminated habitat for many species, although as ground cover was reestablished it provided grazing for such large mammals as deer and elk. Reforestation often was successful on more accessible, privately owned lands in the coastal ranges, but such efforts frequently met with difficulty in areas (often public lands) with poorer soils and steeper, more rugged terrain.

Beginning in the late 19th century, concerns about timber depletion led to the creation of government-protected lands. These formed the core of the present-day system of crown lands in Canada and national forests in the United States and the government supervision of logging. A growing environmental movement was instrumental in the enactment of increasingly stringent logging regulations; those that restricted habitat destruction, such as the old-growth forests inhabited by the northern spotted owl, sparked a bitter dispute between environmentalists and logging interests.

Study and exploration

Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo, a Portuguese explorer in the service of Spain, probably was the first European to explore the coast of California. He is thought to have sailed north in 1542, and his pilot, Bartolomé Ferrelo, may have reached as far as the present southern border of Oregon. Sir Francis Drake sailed the coast in 1579 and may have landed in Oregon. Juan Pérez landed on the west coast of Vancouver Island in 1774, and the following year Bruno Hezeta reached the Washington coast and claimed the area for Spain. Captain James Cook charted the coast from Oregon to the Arctic in 1778.

The first overland explorer was Alexander Mackenzie, who in 1793 traveled westward until he reached the British Columbia coast. In 1805 the Lewis and Clark Expedition reached the Pacific Ocean after following the Columbia River. The last of the great overland treks was by the Canadian explorer Simon Fraser, who followed the river later named for him and reached its mouth (near present-day Vancouver, British Columbia) in 1808.

The first geologic studies of the ranges were carried out in the late 19th century. The great San Francisco earthquake of 1906 precipitated a thorough investigation of the California Coast Ranges. Present-day scientific research focuses on restoring wild stocks of salmon, finding evidence of the periodicity and magnitude of subduction-caused earthquakes, and improving methods of forest management.

James G. Ashbaugh
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