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Canadian ethnobiologist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nancy Jean Turner CM OBC FRSC FLS (born 1947) is a Canadian ethnobiologist, originally qualified in botany, who has done extensive research work with the indigenous peoples of British Columbia, the results of which she has documented in a number of books and numerous articles.
Nancy Turner | |
---|---|
Born | Nancy Jean Turner 1947 (age 76–77) Berkeley, California, U.S. |
Nationality | Canadian |
Citizenship | Canada |
Alma mater | University of British Columbia |
Known for | compendium of aboriginal culture and plant lore in British Columbia |
Awards | R.E. Schultes Award (1997) Order of British Columbia (1999) Canadian Botanical Association’s Lawson Medal (2002) William L. Brown Award (2008) Order of Canada (2009) |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Ethnobiology Ethnobotany |
Institutions | School of Environmental Studies, University of Victoria; Department of Botany, University of British Columbia (adjunct) |
Thesis | Plant taxonomic systems and ethnobotany of three contemporary Indian groups of the Pacific Northwest (Haida, Bella Coola, and Lillooet) (1973) |
Turner was born in Berkeley in California in 1947 but moved to British Columbia when she was five. She obtained her doctorate in Ethnobotany after studying the Bella Coola, Haida and Lillooet indigenous groups of the Pacific North-West.[1] She works by interviewing the groups' elder members to identify their names for plants and their uses. Comparison and scientific analysis of this data has enabled her to draw conclusions.[2] Turner's research documented not only the role that plants have had in these groups' cultures but also the effects that Indigenous peoples have had historically on the landscape of Canada.[1]
The Government of British Columbia admitted Nancy Turner to the Order of British Columbia in 1999 and describe her, her work, and her contributions as follows:[3]
Nancy J. Turner ... is an internationally-distinguished scholar and scientist who has devoted her life to documenting the endangered knowledge of First Nations. As a pioneer in ethnobiology, her more than 25 years of research have focused on the diverse interactions of First Peoples in British Columbia with the ecosystems they depended on and the critical role of plant resources for foods, medicines and materials. Her research will be seen as a most valuable compendium of aboriginal culture and plant lore in British Columbia.
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