Loading [Contrib]/a11y/accessibility-menu.js
Skip to main content
null
Scholarly Review Journal
  • Menu
  • Articles
    • Advocacy
    • Architecture
    • Art
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Astronomy
    • Biology
    • Business
    • Chemistry
    • Computer Science
    • Crime
    • Economics
    • Education
    • Engineering
    • Environment
    • Ethics
    • Fashion
    • History
    • Law
    • Literature
    • Machine Learning
    • Mathematics
    • Media
    • Medicine
    • Mental Health
    • Music
    • Mythology
    • Philosophy
    • Political Science
    • Politics
    • Psychology
    • Religion
    • Sociology
    • Sport
    • Technology
    • All
  • For Authors
  • Editorial Board
  • About
  • Issues
  • Publication Calendar
  • Contact
  • AI Policy
  • IRB Policy
  • Model Paper
  • search
  • RSS feed (opens a modal with a link to feed)

RSS Feed

Enter the URL below into your favorite RSS reader.

http://localhost:35821/feed
History
Vol. Scholarly Debut, Issue Equinox 2025, 2025October 20, 2025 CEST

Ecological Transformation and Indigenous Demographic Collapse at Mission Santa Clara

Aaron J. He, Caleb Wang, Ayush Iyengar, Leo Casey Billante,
Santa Clara Mission de AsísCalifornia missionsIndigenous demographic collapseMission agricultureColonial economyNative population declineSettler colonialismCalifornia historyMission system impactsand Indigenous studies
Copyright Logoccby-4.0 • https://doi.org/10.70121/001c.145112
Photo by Galen Crout on Unsplash
Scholarly Review Journal
He, Aaron J., Caleb Wang, Ayush Iyengar, and Leo Casey Billante. 2025. “Ecological Transformation and Indigenous Demographic Collapse at Mission Santa Clara.” Scholarly Review Journal Scholarly Debut (Equinox 2025). https:/​/​doi.org/​10.70121/​001c.145112.

View more stats

This website uses cookies

We use cookies to enhance your experience and support COUNTER Metrics for transparent reporting of readership statistics. Cookie data is not sold to third parties or used for marketing purposes.

cookies
cookies
cookies
Powered by Scholastica, the modern academic journal management system