Lydia Jennings, Pascua Yaqui and Wix谩rika, is a trail runner, scientist, and postdoctoral fellow at the University of Arizona, who plans to run 130 miles in Colorado and Utah to raise awareness about soil. As she scouted the route she and two other scientists will take this fall, Jennings noticed a series of place names that included . The American landscape is dotted with towns, mountains, rivers, and other landmarks with names that are offensive to Indigenous people, Black people, and other marginalized groups. These names, Jennings says, are just one of the things that need to change in the outdoor recreation space to make it more inclusive, safe, and supportive for Indigenous people. 鈥淐hanging names is the first step of many that has to happen,鈥 Jennings says.
For many Indigenous runners and hikers, Jennings鈥 experience is familiar. Maps have always been a big part of outdoor recreation, but they haven鈥檛 always been inclusive of all communities. Now, Indigenous activists across North America are trying to change the way we use, understand, and create maps of outdoor spaces. One part of this shift is the growing movement to rename places with their original Indigenous names or replace offensive ones. Lots of these efforts are led by Indigenous activists and outdoor recreationists who are pushing for聽events 补苍诲听parks organizations to more deeply understand the role that maps have played in keeping outdoor recreation exclusive 补苍诲听harmful to Indigenous people and other communities of color.
Amid a growing national conversation about colonialism and the Land Back movement鈥攁 broad effort to return and to Indigenous communities鈥攁ctivists are turning to Indigenous-led mapping projects. One of these projects is聽, an interactive online map that shows Indigenous land by nation or community, rather than state and country borders. But Native Land Digital does more than adapt standard maps. Christine Luckasavitch, an Om脿m矛winin矛 Madaoueskarini Anishinaabekwe (a woman of the Madawaska River Algonquin people) who belongs to the Crane Clan, is the executive director of Native Land Digital. The organization is trying to reclaim Indigenous cartographic traditions that are based on storytelling and community, rather than borders. Luckasavitch says that historically, Indigenous cartography blended culture, community bonds, language, and a deep relationship with the land. Native Land Digital, through its online map and outreach, is rebuilding those powerful connections. Luckasavitch believes that the combination of Indigenous mapping and reasserting names is crucial to centering and supporting Indigenous communities. 鈥淭hrough uncovering these places鈥 names, it鈥檚 almost like we鈥檙e reclaiming what we lost connection to due to colonization,鈥 she says. 鈥淭here was a reason our names were wiped off of the map.鈥
Non-Indigenous outdoor recreationists and companies have a responsibility to understand this history, Luckasavitch says. These runners, hikers, and climbers all聽enjoy stolen Indigenous land, land that Indigenous communities often or comfortable accessing due to its violent history. Luckasavitch and other advocates are asking them to acknowledge and reckon with that reality.
鈥淚t鈥檚 not just land acknowledgment. It鈥檚 about honoring and respecting,聽but also being able to give back in some way.鈥
Jordan Marie Brings Three White Horses Daniel, a Lakota runner, advocate, filmmaker, and founder of grassroots Indigenous advocacy organization聽, is encouraging race organizers to use Native Land Digital as a tool to engage more responsibly with their local Indigenous communities. The Rising Hearts organization has a new initiative called聽 that uses a holistic approach to make running more inclusive, support Indigenous communities, and foster connections between race organizers and Indigenous people.
Races that work with Running on Native Lands are required to make land acknowledgements, but they must also participate in at least one other form of outreach or support to Indigenous communities, such as comped entries for Indigenous participants or clothing donations. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not just land acknowledgment. It鈥檚 about honoring and respecting,聽but also being able to give back in some way,鈥 Daniel says.
Renaming offensive place names is also part of Daniel鈥檚 broader effort to make the running community safer for Indigenous athletes and athletes of color. Like Jennings, who saw racial slurs for Black Americans on maps during her trip planning, Daniel believes these conversations can lead to stronger community bonds that foster connection and safety. 鈥淚 saw what happened to聽Ahmaud Arbery.聽I saw what happened to聽George Floyd. I wanted to be someone who could hopefully connect communities together and show that you can show up for Indigenous peoples,鈥 Daniel says. 鈥淏ut Indigenous peoples can show up for other communities, too.鈥
Daniel is also raising聽 for the聽. Crystal C鈥橞earing, the deputy director of the Northern Arapaho Tribal Historic Preservation Office, believes that renaming is a crucial part of the fight to protect Indigenous women. There are place names across Wyoming, she says, that are degrading to Indigenous women in particular. These names do active harm and contribute to the erasure of the crisis, which has claimed thousands of Indigenous people in the U.S. and Canada.
There is, of course, always resistance to changing names. C鈥橞earing works with a group of聽 to push the state of Colorado to聽, a mountain titled after the state鈥檚 former governor. Evans instigated and covered up the 1864聽, which was one of the worst massacres of Indigenous people in U.S. history. Evans was later forced to resign over his role in the atrocity. The proposed new name is Mount Blue Sky. C鈥橞earing says that other tribes called the Arapaho the 鈥淏lue Sky People,鈥 but the name also has significance for a variety of Indigenous communities in the area.
C鈥橞earing has heard many reasons why people are against renaming聽but believes this resistance can be overcome through Indigenous-led conversation, education, and cooperation. As part of the renaming effort, C鈥橞earing and other activists are working to educate Colorado citizens about the Sand Creek massacre and the聽violent history of colonization. 鈥淥ur history book is the land,鈥 C鈥橞earing says.
鈥淐olonial cartographies were essentially a tool toward our genocide and trying to wipe us off of the earth.鈥
Mountains and other landmarks are often at the center of these debates. There is聽Denali, which was previously known as Mount McKinley, in Alaska, 补苍诲听Devil鈥檚 Tower in Wyoming, a popular climbing spot with a name that many local tribes and Indigenous groups say is offensive. According to Luckasavitch of Native Land Digital, because of the often painful history, there is a very real impact for Indigenous people when they see these names on a map. 鈥淐olonial cartographies were essentially a tool toward our genocide and trying to wipe us off of the earth,鈥 she says.
Trail and course maps that replicate this colonial violence not only continue to make Indigenous people feel unwelcome in outdoor spaces聽but also actively contribute to the ongoing persecution they face. C鈥橞earing and her office are using GIS mapping to help reverse that harmful trajectory. Through the digital mapping tool, they are following the Arapaho people鈥檚 journey across the country from the Great Lakes area, where the Arapaho origin story says they came from. Resurfacing and sharing this essential history, she believes, will raise awareness in the general public and empower Arapaho people through their own stories. C鈥橞earing is also helping national parks create story maps that include Indigenous names, a subtle but consequential way of reminding visitors that they are on Indigenous land. Yellowstone National Park聽is expected to premier its new maps for its 150th anniversary next year. C鈥橞earing and her office are also collaborating with Rocky Mountain National Park. These efforts are crucial not just to changing maps and trail signs,聽but also to empowering Indigenous nations to assert their sovereignty and make their claim to stolen land.
Reflecting on the forced colonial understanding of territories and boundaries, Jennings says, 鈥淲e never agreed to have this relationship with this land.鈥 Renaming, land acknowledgements, community building, and Indigenous-centric maps now offer a chance to reset that relationship on Indigenous terms.