"[The Yakima Indians, such as the woman pictured] roamed from northern Oregon to Canada and from the Bitterroots of Montana. Today the. . . .Yakima Indian Nation, the legal descendents of 14 nomadic tribes and bands whose archeology dates from 14,000 years ago, looks restively to the future from the relative confines of a 2,000-square-mile [5,180-square-kilometer] reservation, slightly larger than the state of Delaware. . . .
"But the old Yakimas required nearly ten times that. They fished a hundred miles [160 kilometers] from where they dug wild roots. They rode into Montana for Buffalo. They were hunters and food-gatherers, not farmers."
—Text from "Washington‘s Bountiful Yakima Valley," November 1978, National Geographic magazine