The Dakota Access Pipeline is a 1,134 mile long crude oil pipeline currently under construction from North Dakota to Illinois. Lakota and Dakota activists have established the Sacred Stone Camp in the path of the pipeline to halt its construction, drawing thousands of supporters from tribes across the continent.
This map shows the area around the Sacred Stone Camp with the proposed pipeline route, labelled with Lakota/Dakota place names and oriented to the South.
Map by Jordan Engel with assistance by Dakota Wind. The Dakota Access Pipeline Indigenous Protest map can be reused under the Decolonial Media License 0.1.
Íŋyaŋwakağapi Wakpá – Cannonball River “Stone-Make-For-Themselves River.”
Íŋyaŋ Wakháŋagapi Othí – Sacred Stone Camp / Cannon Ball, North Dakota
“Sacred Stone Camp.”
Íŋyaŋ Woslál Háŋ – Standing Rock Reservation.
Mníšoše – Missouri River “Turbulent Water.”
Pȟá Šuŋg Wakpána – Horsehead Creek “Horse Head Creek.”
Zuzéča Sápa – Dakota Access Pipeline “Black Snake.”
thank you for sharing. can i get the print out?
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[…] ― a relatively simple yet powerful map by Jordan Engle (with help from Dakota Wind) published by The Decolonial Atlas. It uses the indigenous placenames for key waterways and sites in the vicinity of the Sacred Stones […]
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[…] The Decolonial Atlas—Dakota Access Pipeline Indigenous Protest Map. Disponible en: https://decolonialatlas.wordpress.com/2016/09/07/dakota-access-pipeline-indigenous-protest-map/ […]
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[…] The Decolonial Atlas—Dakota Access Pipeline Indigenous Protest Map. Available at https://decolonialatlas.wordpress.com/2016/09/07/dakota-access-pipeline-indigenous-protest-map/ […]
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[…] Turbulent Water – Mníšoše – “Missouri River” Sacred Stone River – Íŋyaŋwakağapi Wakpá – “Cannonball River” […]
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[…] a relatively simple yet powerful map by Jordan Engle (with help from Dakota Wind) published by The Decolonial Atlas. It uses the indigenous placenames for key waterways and sites in the vicinity of the Sacred Stones […]
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[…] ― a relatively simple yet powerful map by Jordan Engle (with help from Dakota Wind) published by The Decolonial Atlas. It uses the indigenous placenames for key waterways and sites in the vicinity of the Sacred Stones […]
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[…] ― a relatively simple yet powerful map by Jordan Engle (with help from Dakota Wind) published by The Decolonial Atlas. It uses the indigenous placenames for key waterways and sites in the vicinity of the Sacred Stones […]
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[…] https://decolonialatlas.wordpress.com/2016/09/07/dakota-access-pipeline-indigenous-protest-map/ […]
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[…] Map from the Decolonial Atlas see key on their site here. […]
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Reblogged this on Nick Robson's Blog.
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[…] via Dakota Access Pipeline Indigenous Protest Map — The Decolonial Atlas […]
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If this map is south oriented it seems to show the pipeline right of way as going through a corner of the reservation. Which would be incorrect. Was that a deliberate misrepresentation?
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[…] by a relatively simple yet powerful map by Jordan Engle (with help from Dakota Wind) published by The Decolonial Atlas[21]. It uses the indigenous placenames for key waterways and sites in the vicinity of the Sacred […]
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[…] by a relatively simple yet powerful map by Jordan Engle (with help from Dakota Wind) published by The Decolonial Atlas[21]. It uses the indigenous placenames for key waterways and sites in the vicinity of the Sacred […]
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[…] was partially inspired by–a relatively simple yet powerful map by Jordan Engle published by The Decolonial Atlas. It uses the indigenous placenames for key waterways and sites in the vicinity of the Sacred Stones […]
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[…] partially inspired by–a relatively simple yet powerful map by Jordan Engle published by The Decolonial Atlas. It uses the indigenous placenames for key waterways and sites in the vicinity of the Sacred Stones […]
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Could you add where the existing natural gas pipeline that was built in the 1980’s goes as well?
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Great job
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