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Native Place Names - From Tahoma to Rainier and back. — Cascadia Department of Bioregion

Native Place Names - From Tahoma to Rainier and back. — Cascadia Department  of Bioregion

Across much of Washington State the exclamation “The Mountain is out!” turns heads and unites hearts around our mutual love for Tahoma (Mount Rainier) and the beauty of the Pacific Northwest. This blog post explores the provenance of the names applied to the tallest of Cascade peaks. 

The Portland CascadiaNow! Chapter raises awareness of bioregionalism & Cascadia, and creates local impact in their communities for a bioregion that is resilient, inclusive and sustainable.

 

Bioregion of Cascadia Watershed Map Poster — Cascadia Department of Bioregion

Northwest Theory - “Rainier” is one of the most iconic names in the PNW, but how the mountain came to be called that instead of its original Indigenous name, Tahoma, is a

The Cascadia Bioregion – The Decolonial Atlas

Indigenous Sovereignties — Cascadia Department of Bioregion

First Dept of Bioregion Flag Making Workshop hosted in Laurentia — Cascadia Department of Bioregion

Cascadia Department of Bioregion - Welcome to the #Cascadia bioregion, the #PNW defined through the watersheds of the Fraser, Snake and Columbia rivers. #Bioregionalism is the idea that natural borders better represent

Cascadia movement - Wikipedia

Cascadia, Geography of Bioregion, Name, Flag, Images & Maps, Philosophy, etc.

Cascadia (bioregion) - Wikipedia

Cascadia Store — Cascadia Department of Bioregion

Mount Rainier - Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ecotopia Today: Learning from Cascadia — Cascadia Department of Bioregion

Tribes in Washington push to rename Rainier to 'Mt. Taquoma

Why You Should Become a Cascadian