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Bibliography
from UH Mānoa MLA Capstone, Spring 2022 - Hana Fulghum
by UH Manoa - Master of Landscape Architecture (MLA) Program
1. Abbott, I.A. Lā‘au Hawaii Traditional Hawaiian Uses of Plants ; Bishop Museum Press: Honolulu, HI, USA, 1992.
2. Craighill, Handy Edward Smith, et al. Native Planters in Old Hawaii. 1972.
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3. Noa Kekuewa Lincoln , Jack Rossen, Peter Vitousek, Jesse Kahoonei, Dana Shapiro , Keone Kalawe, Mahealani Pai , Kehaulani Marshall 8 and Kamuela Meheula. (2018). Restoration of ‘Aina Malo‘o on Hawai‘i Island: Expanding Biocultural Relationships. Sustainability. 10, 3985; doi:10.3390/ su10113985
4. Mueller-Dombois, Dieter, The Hawaiian Ahupua‘a Land Use System: Its Biological Resource Zones and the Challenge for Silvicultural Restoration.Bishop Museum Bulletin in Cultural and Environmental Studies 3: 23–33 (2007).
5. Kaululaau, A. Ke Hae Hawaii, Vol 2. mo 30 October 21, 1857.
6. Kalokuokamaile, Z.P.K. Ka Nupepa Kuokoa, 1922.
7. Kupele, G.W.E. Ka Hae Hawaii, Vol 2. No. 26, September 23, 1857.
8. Lincoln, Noa Kekuewa, and Peter Vitousek. “Indigenous Polynesian Agriculture in Hawai‘i.” Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Environmental Science, 2017, https://doi. org/10.1093/acrefore/9780199389414.013.376.
9. Rose-Marie Kapā’anaokalāokeola Nākoa Oliveira Katrina-Ann. Ancestral Places: Understanding Kanaka Geographies. Oregon State University Press, 2014.
10. Rose-Marie Kapāanaokalāokeola Oliveira Katrina-Ann, and Erin Kahunawaika‘ala Wright. Kanaka ‘ōiwi Methodologies: Mo‘olelo and Metaphor. University of Hawai‘i Press, 2016.
11. Paglinawan, Lynette K., et al. Nānā i Ke Kumu. Lili’uokalani Trust, 2020.
12. Winter, Kawika & Beamer, Kamanamaikalani & Vaughan, Mehana & Friedlander, Alan & Kido, Mike & Whitehead, A. & Akutagawa, Malia & Kurashima, Natalie & Lucas, Matthew & Nyberg, Ben. (2018). The Moku System: Managing Biocultural Resources for Abundance within Social-Ecological Regions in Hawai‘i. Sustainability. 10. 3554. 10.3390/ su10103554.
13. Winter, Kawika B., Noa K. Lincoln, and Fikret Berkes. 2018. “The Social-Ecological Keystone Concept: A Quantifiable Metaphor for Understanding the Structure, Function, and Resilience of a Biocultural System” Sustainability 10, no. 9: 3294. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10093294