11678 research outputs found
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Cook Creek
Bear Valley C&H alltoment Bruce Meadows/Sheeptrail unit sheeptrail - Cook Creek inspection ride with permittees.https://digscholarship.unco.edu/lowman_1994/1132/thumbnail.jp
Cook Creek
Bear Valley C&H alltoment Bruce Meadows/Sheeptrail unit sheeptrail - Cook Creek inspection ride with permittees.https://digscholarship.unco.edu/lowman_1994/1135/thumbnail.jp
Cook Creek
Bear Valley C&H alltoment Bruce Meadows/Sheeptrail unit sheeptrail - Cook Creek inspection ride with permittees.https://digscholarship.unco.edu/lowman_1994/1133/thumbnail.jp
Cook Creek
Bear Valley C&H alltoment Bruce Meadows/Sheeptrail unit sheeptrail - Cook Creek inspection ride with permittees.https://digscholarship.unco.edu/lowman_1994/1134/thumbnail.jp
Cook Creek
Bear Valley C&H alltoment Bruce Meadows/Sheeptrail unit sheeptrail - Cook Creek inspection ride with permittees.https://digscholarship.unco.edu/lowman_1994/1130/thumbnail.jp
Cook Creek
Bear Valley C&H alltoment Bruce Meadows/Sheeptrail unit sheeptrail - Cook Creek inspection ride with permittees.https://digscholarship.unco.edu/lowman_1994/1131/thumbnail.jp
Why Study Climate Change?
The article aims to link science and management to better understand human-caused change in wildland ecosystems within Rocky Mountain National Park and to better inform park management on how to sustain wildland ecosystems in the park
Supporting Graduate School Success with Mindfulness
Being a graduate student can be one of the most fulfilling opportunities for learning and professional growth. At the same time, it can also be one of the most stressful endeavors, full of opportunities for deeply questioning our own competence, commitment, and choices. How do we successfully navigate such a rewarding and perilous landscape? Mindfulness practice can’t present a roadmap to your destination or a shield to protect you from every hazard. But it can provide a reliable compass and walking stick to guide and stabilize your journey. In this talk, I will introduce a set of mindfulness techniques that, with enough practice, will support you across grad school’s ups and downs
Honoring the Past and Celebrating the Present: 100 Years of Research at Rocky Mountain National Park
In 2015, Rocky Mountain National Park (Colorado) celebrated 100 years of protecting high-elevation ecosystems and wilderness character while providing visitors access to inspiring wild places. We took this centennial year as a time of celebration and a time for reflection on the strengths and weaknesses of our resource stewardship program. While the mountains within the park have changed relatively little over the past century, our approach to integrating science into park and wilderness management has changed dramatically. It is only recently that we have had the capacity to embrace adaptive management and work with partners to effectively use science to inform policy and management actions.
Rocky Mountain National Park; Lee, Willis; Nelson, Ruth; Willard, Beatrice
The Politics of Solitude: Listening to Environmental Change in Rocky Mountain National Park, 1945-Present
A telling of the history of mechanical nose\u27s proliferation in RMNP and people\u27s reactions to tourist and their machines. A sensory and environments history of the park.
Rocky Mountain National Park; Boxwell, Mark; Smith, Mark; Marx, Leo; Sutter, Paul; Coates, Peter; Estes Park; McNeill; Crutzen, Paul ;Nash, Roderick; Brooks Range; Darling, Fraser; Echhorn, Noel; Harvey, Mark; Wilderness Act; Abbey, Edward; Mooney, David; Estes Park Trail Gazette; Estes Park Board of Trustees; Estes Park Airport Committee; Love, John Arthur; Beau; Lucas; Bussey, Woodrow; Federal Aviation Administration; Louter, David; Black, Brian; Eisenhower, Dwight; Drury. Newton; Mission 66