Beyond Preservation: Restoring and Inventing LandscapesA. Dwight Baldwin, Judith De Luce, Carl Pletsch U of Minnesota Press, 1994 - 280 strán (strany) |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 5 z 42.
Strana 7
... biologically feasible ? What are the costs of landscape reconstruction , and is this a legitimate goal of society ? What are the ethical , political , and so- cial consequences of this kind of work , and what are the competing claims of ...
... biologically feasible ? What are the costs of landscape reconstruction , and is this a legitimate goal of society ? What are the ethical , political , and so- cial consequences of this kind of work , and what are the competing claims of ...
Strana 12
... biological science is not presently capable of restoring a landscape to its pristine form , and even if it were , the resulting ecosystem would have to be managed like a garden in order to preserve it , a much less efficient process ...
... biological science is not presently capable of restoring a landscape to its pristine form , and even if it were , the resulting ecosystem would have to be managed like a garden in order to preserve it , a much less efficient process ...
Strana 16
... Biological Expansion of Europe , 900-1900 . New York : Cambridge University Press . Gomez - Pompa , Arturo , and Andrea Kaus . 1992. " Taming the Wilderness Myth . " Bio- Science 42 : 271-79 . Jackson , Wes . 1980. New Roots for ...
... Biological Expansion of Europe , 900-1900 . New York : Cambridge University Press . Gomez - Pompa , Arturo , and Andrea Kaus . 1992. " Taming the Wilderness Myth . " Bio- Science 42 : 271-79 . Jackson , Wes . 1980. New Roots for ...
Strana 21
... biological diversity and richness . 2. The ecological dimension . The real challenge of environmentalism is not to preserve nature by protecting it from human beings or rescuing it from their influence , but to provide the basis for a ...
... biological diversity and richness . 2. The ecological dimension . The real challenge of environmentalism is not to preserve nature by protecting it from human beings or rescuing it from their influence , but to provide the basis for a ...
Strana 36
Dosiahli ste svoj limit zobrazení tejto knihy..
Dosiahli ste svoj limit zobrazení tejto knihy..
Obsah
THEORY | 67 |
PRACTICE | 111 |
IMPLICATIONS AND CONSEQUENCES | 193 |
RESPONSES | 241 |
Constructing a New Ecological Paradigm | 260 |
Contributors | 267 |
Index | 273 |
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activities aesthetic agriculture animals areas Barrett Barrier Islands beauty biological biosphere conservation create creation culture Dare County diversity domination Dunlap Earth ecological restoration ecologists economic ecosys ecosystems environment environmental essay extinction forest patches Frederick Turner garden Genesis habitat Harper's Magazine idea implications Invented Landscape islands Jordan and Turner Kenya Landscape Ecology landscape restoration living Loucks maker's knowledge managed forest Mars Miami University mined land myth National nutrients Ohio organisms percent plant species poem population prairie restoration preservation preservationists primate problems Rain Forest reclamation responsibility rest of nature restoration and invention restoration ecology restorationists restored prairie ritual role seeds sense soil strip Sustainable Tana River terraforming tion tradition tree species TRNPR Tropical ture Turner and Jordan University of Wisconsin-Madison University Press wilderness William Jordan worldview