ix, 189 pages color illustrations, color maps 28 x 26 cm
Type:
Maps
Atlases
Atlas
Cartes géographiques
Place:
United States
États-Unis
Date:
2021
Contents:
Cartography in the National Park Service -- Recreation -- Visitor and resource protection -- Managing fire -- Natural resources -- Cultural resources -- Facilities, infrastructure, and transportation -- Working with communities and partners -- Park management
Summary:
Get an insider look at the US National Park Service to see how they use maps and geospatial technology to protect and manage America's national parks
"Maps easily cap your first greeting upon arrival at a national park, allowing you to visualize its vastness, plan your trip, and keep a compact souvenir of your visit. But for the US National Park Service (NPS), maps do more than provide guidance and navigation. Maps help the NPS protect visitors and natural resources. They help manage fires, both unplanned and prescribed. They provide a basis for preserving cultural resources, such as archaeological sites and historic buildings, and for establishing needed facilities, infrastructure, and transportation. The maps in Mapping America's National Parks: Preserving Our Natural and Cultural Treasures are not only beautiful representations of special places. Within the maps are layers of geographic information--a bevy of research and science--that the NPS uses to perform these myriad essential services and to ultimately fulfill their mission. With over 240 full-color maps and photographs of national parks, monuments, battlefields, historic sites, lakeshores, seashores, scenic rivers and trails, and more, Mapping America's National Parks takes you on a journey through our most treasured locations and shows how geographic information system (GIS) software helps the NPS keep the balance between park enjoyment and preservation. Discover how GIS helps the NPS: provide security for individual wildlife species, members of a crowd at a peaceful demonstration, and entire ecosystems; analyze where people most likely are stranded, where they are least likely stranded, and distribute assets in search and rescue operations; develop strategic plans, budgets, and protection for fire management; and share intelligence on wildlife trafficking, zoonotic diseases, field medicine protocols, and more." -- Provided by publisher
Topic:
National parks and reserves--Management--Maps Search this