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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1021

Ethnographic Overview and Assessment: Zion National Park Utah, and Pipe Spring National Monument, Arizona

Stoffle, Richard W., Austin, Diane, Halmo, David, Phillips, Arthur 07 1900 (has links)
This is an applied ethnographic study of Southern Paiute cultural resources and how these are related to the natural ecosystems that surround and incorporate Zion National Park in southern Utah and Pipe Spring National Monument in northern Arizona. Southern Paiute people perceive Zion National Park and Pipe Spring National Monument as places whose significance derives from larger cultural and ecological landscapes. Southern Paiute people view both parks as being parts of riverine ecosystems. Zion National Park is a place along the Virgin River, and Pipe Spring National Monument part of the greater Kanab Creek Hydrological System. The current boundaries of both parks are largely irrelevant for understanding the lives of birds that fly along the river, of deer who seasonally migrate up and down the river, and of fish who swim in the river. Paiute people, whose ancestors lived along these riverine ecosystems for a thousand years or more, recognize that the plants they gathered, the animals they hunted, and the lives they lived are unrelated to the current boundaries of these two parks. As a result, the National Park Service and the Southern Paiutes arrived at the same conclusion: that is, to understand the cultural and natural significance of these parks requires knowledge of their relationships with other places. Thus it is both administratively and culturally appropriate for this applied ethnographic study to follow an ecosystem approach. This study was unique in two major ways. Unlike many other American Indian cultural resources studies conducted within National Parks at this period of time, this study moved beyond the formal boundaries of these NPS units in an effort to understand them as components of a broader natural ecosystem. As such, this study built upon the scientific and social framework for ecologically based stewardship of Federal lands and waters. This report provides both the ethnographic information relating to Pipe Spring National Monument and Zion National Park. This information was then incorporated in the parks’ resource management plans
1022

Native American Sacred Sites and the Department of Defense

Deloria Jr., Vine, Stoffle, Richard W. 06 1900 (has links)
Since 1990, at the direction of Congress, the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) has been developing the Legacy Resource Management Program to enhance DoD's stewardship of cultural and natural resources for which it has responsibilities. The Legacy Program is designed to go beyond compliance with various host nation, Federal, tribal, state, and local historic preservation, religious freedom, and natural resource protection laws, policies, regulations, and guidance. The original Legacy legislation specifically directed the Program to assess the adequacy of DoD's stewardship of Native American resources, for which it may have conservation or management responsibilities either as a major landholder or as a Federal agency whose activities affect traditional Native American values and practices. This report is about Native Americans and their cultural resource relationships with the Department of Defense. This study does not consider the Native American relationships of all 16 Defense agencies that report to the Department of Defense. Instead, the study was restricted to the Army, Navy, Air Force, and Marine Corps.
1023

THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF PECOS NATIONAL MONUMENT, NEW MEXICO.

Burtchin, Donald Lee. January 1983 (has links)
No description available.
1024

Visitor attitudes and perceptions of use management in Rocky Mountain National Park

Beidleman, Carol Aileen, 1956- January 1988 (has links)
Increasing visitation to national parks and the resulting resource impact has caused many park administrators to implement restrictive use management strategies. Though it seems clear that the resource has benefited from these use restrictions, little research has been done to determine their effect on the visitor. The goal of this study was to provide information to help guide the administrators of Rocky Mountain National Park in evaluating current use management actions and developing new ones in the future to both satisfactorily meet the protection needs of the resource and protect the quality of the visitor experience. Frontcountry campers were surveyed to determine awareness and attitudes about current and possible use management actions, perceptions of national park management purpose and challenges, and socio-demographic information. Respondents favored the majority of current use management actions, but were opposed to strongly restrictive actions considered as a possibility in the future.
1025

Studentų gyvenamasis kompleksas Vilniuje / Student Apartment Studios in Vilnius

Dubovskytė, Indrė 01 July 2010 (has links)
Baigiamajame magistro darbe nagrinėjama studentų bendrabučių problematika, aptariamas pasirinktos temos aktualumas ir analogiškos paskirties pastatų projektavimo principai. Darbe analizuojami užsienio šalių studentų kompleksai suprojektuoti per pastaruosius penkerius metus ir apžvelgiami šia tema atlikti konkursiniai darbai. Apibendrinus tiriamąją medžiagą, parengta projektuojamo objekto programa ir suprojektuotas studentų gyvenamasis kompleksas. Išanalizavus studentų aukštųjų mokyklų situaciją Vilniaus mieste pasirinkta tinkamiausia ir problematiškiausia vieta studentų kompleksui. Atliktos teritorijos istorinių šaltinių, kultūros vertybių ir urbanistinės analizės. Ištirtų duomenų rezultatai apibendrinami, pateikiamos išvados. Vadovaujantis teritorijos ir sklypo tyrimų išvadomis pateikiami teritorijos sutvarkymo ir atgaivinimo siūlymai. Magistro baigiamajame darbe įgyvendinti užsibrėžti tikslai suprojektuoti funkcionalų, daugiafunkcinį studentų kompleksą, atitinkantį šiuolaikinio jaunimo poreikius. / The thesis examines student housing topic and the relevance of the issue. The research of analogical building design principles includes student complexes designed worldwide and some competition-based projects. The individual project of student housing complex is prepared in accordance with this research material. The site selection for the project is based on an analysis of the present academical structure in the urban context of Vilnius. The complexity of the chosen area resulted a broader research of historical sources, evaluation of cultural values, dissection of urban quality. The analytical educations leaded to a conceptual proposal of territory’s urban regeneration and recovery. Master thesis aims to implement determinate goals designing a multifunctional student housing complex that suits the needs of contemporary youth. The work consists of eight sections: introduction, analytical review of sources, local research, experimental design, the draft explanatory memorandum, conclusions, references.
1026

Environmental Behaviour, Place Attachment and Park Visitation: A case study of visitors to Point Pelee National Park

Halpenny, Elizabeth A. January 2006 (has links)
This thesis explores the relationship between place attachment and pro-environmental behaviour expressed by visitors to Point Pelee National Park. Place attachment, the functional, cognitive and emotional bond with a place, may play a role in promoting environmentally responsible behaviours. This may be especially true of place-specific pro-environmental behaviours; however place attachment may also have a "carry-over" effect in that its impact on individuals' self identity may also foster pro-environmental behaviour in individuals' every day lives. <br /><br /> An exploration of these relationships was achieved, first by measuring the intensity of place attachment and pro-environment behavioural intentions expressed by visitors to Point Pelee National Park. This was followed by an examination of the relationship between these two constructs using correlation analysis and structural equation modeling. Data was collected with a mail-based self-completed questionnaire. A quota sample of visitors to Point Pelee National Park was utilized. A response rate of 32% (<em>n</em> = 355) was achieved. <br /><br /> The relationship between place attachment and pro-environmental intentions was explored further through the measurement of several related variables. These factors include place satisfaction (based on an appraisal of nature, social and activity-based environments), motivation for visiting the park (related to social interaction and nature observation, as well as activity-based and learning opportunities), distance between the park and visitors' residences, membership in environmental organizations, and visitation patterns including visitation to the park during childhood, length of affiliation with the park, length of visit to the park, and frequency of visitation to the park. Theoretical and empirical research suggests that these factors may affect place attachment, pro-environment behavioural intentions, and/or the relationship between these two constructs. <br /><br /> Study results found positive associations between place attachment and all of these variables with the exception of visitation motives associated with learning and engaging in a favourite activity. The strongest predictive relationships were observed with anti-substitution (the inability of an individual to substitute the park for another destination because of a lack of resources such as time or money or a lack of awareness of comparable sites) followed by frequency of visits to the park; park commitment (based on Friends group membership and donations of time and money to the Friends group); Friends of Point Pelee (FoPP) membership; and park relationship (which was based on visitation to the park as a child and length of affiliation); and, satisfaction with the park. <br /><br /> Results support the proposition that place attachment has a strong positive association with both park-specific pro-environment behavioural intentions (e. g. , Write letters in support of Point Pelee N. P. and similar protected areas) as well as general pro-environment behavioural intentions (e. g. , Pay extra for transportation if it is environmentally-friendly). Place attachment strongly predicted park-specific, and moderately predicted general pro-environmental intentions. A number of other variables had an indirect effect on park-specific intentions; notable effects were demonstrated by frequency of visits; park relationship; visitation to the park as a child; place satisfaction; social satisfaction; FoPP membership; and, park commitment; anti-substitution. These affects were mediated by place attachment. After place attachment the strongest predictors of park-specific intentions were anti-substitution; frequency of visits; park commitment; and, general environmental commitment (which was based on membership in an environmental organization and donations of time and money to that organization). <br /><br /> Place attachment was not the only direct predicator of general pro-environmental intentions; general environmental commitment and membership in an environmental organization also directly predicted general pro-environmental intentions. Notable indirect effects, mediated by place attachment were produced by frequency of visits; park relationship; FoPP membership; park commitment; and anti-substitution. The strongest predictors of general pro-environmental intentions were general environmental commitment, followed by place attachment, membership in an environmental organization, and frequency of park visitation. <br /><br /> These findings correspond with much of the literature published on place attachment formation and the development of pro-environmental behaviours. The most notable contribution of this study is its comparison of place attachment's impact on general versus place-specific behaviours, and the role that several related variables play in this relationship.
1027

Community structure and composition changes of two old-growth forests at Versailles State Park in southeastern Indiana

Behforouz, Kavon Benjamin 04 May 2013 (has links)
In the 1950’s and 1960’s, studies of two old-growth forest stands in Versailles State Park, Laughery Bluff and Dogwood Nature Preserves, were designed and carried out by Potzger to provide the baseline necessary to investigate future trends in these forest communities. In 1968 and 1988, Jackson surveyed these stands again and identified changes in attributes and size classes over that 20-year period. In 2011 and 2012, these sites were re-sampled to document change in species composition and stand structure since 1968. Diameter at breast height (dbh) and species identification were recorded for all stems with dbh ≥ 10 cm. Trees between 1 and 9.9 cm dbh were sampled by counting the number of individuals by species. These data were used to calculate density, dominance, and importance values, as well as to provide full-census data on the overstory size classes at the two sites. Notable findings since the prior studies included the continued increase of Acer saccharum in density and basal area as well as the continued loss of Cornus florida and Fagus grandifolia stems throughout both stands. / Department of Biology
1028

Razna National Park : - a selection of excursion destinations

Zandén Ljungmark, Mimi January 2012 (has links)
Different areas in Latvias youngest National Park Rāzna has been visited and analyzed. One objectivewas to find out if ecotourism is a possibility and what improvements need to be made. Latvia has avery old history of nature conservation. Objectives to protect valuable species and habitats for thefuture are influenced by factors such as economy and politics. The laws and regulations concerningenvironmental care are dependent on the processes and conditions that have contributed to formingthem. What is considered normality in Sweden can be completely different in Latvia eventhough theintentions and wished results are the same. The conclusion is that there is potential for ecotourism,although many factors must be considered and disadvantageous situations be avoided in the natureprotecting process.
1029

Census Tract 9: Barrio Viejo & Armory Park

Compton, Sydney, Cortez, Bianca, Donahue, Brooke, Donahue, Katie, Riley, Mackenzie, Runchey, Krista January 2017 (has links)
Poster / Soc 397a / 2017 Poverty in Tucson Field Workshop
1030

Perspectives of Sustainable Collaborative Management: A Case Study in Kerinci Seblat National Park, Sumatra-Indonesia

Yusri, Doni 15 June 2016 (has links)
No description available.

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