Iverson Preserve Site Management Plan

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Iverson Preserve Site Management Plan IVERSON PRESERVE SITE MANAGEMENT PLAN CAMANO ISLAND , WA DECEMBER 2011 prepared for Island County Public Works Department PO Box 5000 Coupeville, WA 98239 360.678.5111 prepared by Northwest Ecological Services 1911 C Street Bellingham, WA 98225 360.920.0512 This page intentionally left blank AUTHORS Northwest Ecological Services Northwest Ecological Services, LLC is a small, service-oriented environmental consulting firm. NES provides a range of biological services to the public and private sectors. Biological services include wetland assessments, habitat analysis, restoration and mitigation plans, regulatory compliance, and ecological design. Analiese Burns and Vikki Jackson, the project leads for NES, are owners of NES and Professional Wetland Scientists (PWS). Analiese has over 11 years and Vikki has over 20 years of ecological consulting experience in the Puget Sound region. 1911 C Street Bellingham, WA 98225 360.734.9484 eccosDesign EccosDesign LLC is a landscape architecture and planning firm with a broad base of experience in recreational and commercial design. Patrik Dylan, project lead for eccosDesign, has served as a Landscape Architect and project manager in both the private and public sectors before starting his own design firm in 2003. His work focused on site planning, landscape design, and parks and recreational design. 505 S First Street, Ste B Mt. Vernon, WA 98273 360.419.7400 Shelterbelt, Inc. Shelterbelt Inc. Shelterbelt, Inc. is an open-land management and Revegetation and Restoration restoration company. Noah Booker, project lead for Shelterbelt, Inc., has 18 years experience in restoration and revegetation, noxious weed management, horticulture, arboriculture, and erosion control. 2406 Broadway Bellingham, WA 98225 360.920.1902 I VERSON P RESERVE II I SITE MANAGEMENT PLAN This page intentionally left blank I VERSON P RESERVE IV SITE MANAGEMENT PLAN EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Introduction The Iverson Preserve Site Management Plan provides guidance for the sustainable management and operation of Iverson Preserve consistent with site attributes, funding requirements, and the Island County Comprehensive Plan. This Site Management Plan documents baseline information on existing conditions, supporting efforts, and site opportunities and challenges. The Plan then incorporates public input and professional judgment into a set of recommendations to guide current activities and future actions. The Site Management Plan is intended for use by Island County and other community stakeholders. This document compiles existing, accessible information. No original scientific fieldwork or engineering studies were completed for the purposes of this plan. The Site Management Plan provides recommendations on improving the current function of the Preserve. This Plan does not attempt to alter the classification for the Preserve or recommend changes that deviate substantially from use definitions contained in the Island County Comprehensive Plan and Island County Shoreline Master Program. The Site Management Plan is focused on the uses and resources within the boundaries of the Preserve, with special emphasis on ecological protection. Although the project team feels strongly that addressing site access and parking issues are critical to the successful site operation and management, these topics are addressed in concept only due to the limited scope of this document. Existing Conditions Summary Iverson Preserve is located on the eastern shore of Camano Island, south of Livingston Bay and north of Barnum Point (Section 32, Township 32 N, Range 3 East and Section 5, Township 31 North, Range 3 East, W.M.). Island County purchased the 120 acre Iverson Preserve with Conservation Futures Funds (CFFs) in 1999. Infrastructure within the Preserve is limited, but includes important features such as a small (14-vehicle) parking area, emergency turn-around, information kiosk, trails, dike, tide gate, seasonal portable toilet (porta-potty), and an active agricultural field. The Iverson Preserve is within the Port Susan marine ecosystem in the Island watershed, Watershed Resource Inventory Area (WRIA) 6. The Preserve encompasses an accreting shoreline reach (Island County MRC, 2011). Historically, the Iverson Preserve property was dominated by a low-energy salt marsh (Sheldon & Associates, Inc., 2001; USGS 2011; US Coastal and Geodetic Survey, 1886; Philip Williams & Associates, Ltd., 2001). The 1886 US Coastal and Geodetic Survey and 1911 Department of the Interior maps depict the property as consisting of salt marsh with multiple tidal channels at the base of a relatively steep upland bank (Appendix A). By 1943, the property was drained and protected by a dike, most likely for the purpose of converting the land to agricultural use (USGS, 2011 and Sheldon & Associates, Inc., 2001). The dike and associated tide gate remain to this day. When Island County purchased the property in 1999, the shoreline was undeveloped with the exception of the dike and tide gate. Island County currently leases the 68 acres of agricultural land for commercial seed farming. Iverson Preserve and the surrounding portion of WRIA 6 is recognized as a having significant fish and wildlife resources and is the focus of several on-going conservation efforts. Iverson I VERSON P RESERVE V SITE MANAGEMENT PLAN Preserve itself contains several habitat types: managed agriculture, open water/ditches, emergent/herbaceous, scrub shrub, forest, salt marsh, mud flat, nearshore, and eelgrass. The variety of habitats is a reflection of the diversity of hydrology, landforms, soils, and land uses. The Iverson Preserve site has a variety of noxious weeds representing some of the most common deleterious invasive plants in the area. The current infestation level can be characterized as “average” or fairly typical as compared to other sites on Camano Island. Iverson Preserve supports a wide range of fish and wildlife species. The variety of species is due in part to the presence of several habitat types and the Preserve’s location at the intersection of three distinct ecosystems: marine waters, uplands, and freshwater river deltas. The Preserve has been known to contain larger mammals such as coyote and deer, smaller mammals, salmon, sturgeon, shellfish, and birds. Sport fishing is a common activity along the banks of Iverson Preserve. The open, protected habitats within Iverson Preserve are becoming increasingly important to fish and wildlife populations as development expands on Camano Island and within the Stillaguamish Basin. The Preserve is mapped as containing 10 species or habitats potentially present on or within the near vicinity of Iverson Preserve that are protected by the Island County Critical Areas Ordinance, listed by Washington State as a Species of Concern (i.e. Endangered, Threatened, Sensitive, or Candidate) or as Priority Habitats, and/or are listed under the federal Endangered Species Act (WDFW, 2011a; WDFW, 2011b; WDFW, 2008; Beamer, et al., 2006; National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Fisheries Service [NOAA-Fisheries], 2011; US Fish and Wildlife Service [USFWS], 2011). An additional five protected species or habitats are mapped as occurring within the near vicinity. Opportunities & Challenges Iverson Preserve has a number of opportunities and challenges that were identified through public input, discussions with stakeholders, and review of existing literature: Opportunities & Challenges Infrastructure & Facilities • Parking • Site Access • Traffic/Speeding • Trespassing/Vandalism • Support Facilities • Rules/Signage Standards Ecological • Agricultural Production • Ecosystem Protection • Tide gate/Ditches/Dike • Noxious Weeds • Hunting • Mosquitoes Management • Communication/Coordination • Ownership/Operation • Enforcement I VERSON P RESERVE VI SITE MANAGEMENT PLAN Proposed Vision Statement Iverson Preserve is a unique public space with broad community support. Although the Preserve is universally loved, there is no defined Vision that documents the shared value of this space other than the conventional assumption it be use for low-impact recreation Below is a proposed Vision Statement for consideration by Island County, citizens, and key stakeholders: Iverson Preserve is a site where citizens come to enjoy the beauty of the natural environment through limited, low-impact activities while exhibiting stewardship to ensure the health of sensitive ecosystems. Low impact activities are those activities that do not degrade the surrounding waters, habitats, and vegetation communities and are compatible with the available facilities and surrounding land uses. Site Management Recommendations The challenge of managing Iverson Preserve is to balance human activities with the sensitive habitats in a coordinated and sustainable manner. This Plan proposes specific management recommendations to achieve this objective. The recommendations are intended to address site Opportunities and Challenges consistent with the proposed Vision Statement. The recommendations are divided into “Near Term” and “Long Term” categories. The Near Term recommendations are simple in nature and can likely be implemented with little or no additional planning work. The Long Term recommendations are conceptual in nature. Due to the complexity of the Long Term projects, additional outreach, planning, design, permitting, and/or feasibility analysis are needed for implementation. All of the proposed actions depend upon identifying and securing funding. In their entirety, the recommendations provide a coordinated
Recommended publications
  • Nutrition of Horses and Mules ^ Fundamentalh^ Are Not Unlike Those of Other Domestic Livestock
    NUTRITION OF HORSES AND MULES by Ear! B. Krantz and S. R. Speelman ^ I H t first part of this article deals with the nutritional requirements of horses insofar as these have been determined; actually, there has not been very much experimental work in this field. The second part discusses practical feeding under different conditions, including suggested rations and the use of concentrates, roughage, and mineral supplements. THE PRINCIPLES of the nutrition of horses and mules ^ fundamentalh^ are not unlike those of other domestic livestock. Thus^ for body building and maintenance, for growth, and for production, the horse and mule have need for protein, carbohydrates, fats, minerals, and vitamins, much as these essentials are required for similar vital processes by cattle, sheep, swine, and poultry. The relative importance of the various nutrients and the quantities required by horses and mules are, however, not the same as for the other farm animals. Nor do the requirements of horses and mules necessarily remain the same from day to day or from period to period. The stage of life, the kind and degree of activity, climatic conditions, the kind, quality, and amount of feed, the system of management, the health and individuality of the animal, and perhaps other equally important factors are all continually exerting a pow^erful influence in the deter- mination of nutritive needs. How^ well the individual feeder or experi- menter understands, anticipates, interprets, and meets these require- ments usually determines the success or failure of the ration and of horse or mule keeping. The present discussion of the nutritive requirements of horses and mules considers the subject briefly from the standpoints of adequacy of rations, feed economies, and feeding practices.
    [Show full text]
  • Livestock Department Premium Book
    State of Illinois JB Pritzker, Governor Department of Agriculture Jerry Costello II, Director 2021 Illinois State Fair Livestock Department Premium Book DIVISION I LIVESTOCK DEPARTMENT PREMIUM BOOK OF THE 168th YEAR OF ILLINOIS STATE FAIR AUGUST 12-22, 2021 DIVISION I - LIVESTOCK DEPARTMENT PREMIUM BOOK DIVISION II - GENERAL PREMIUM BOOK DIVISION III - GENERAL 4-H PROJECTS DIVISION IV - NON-SOCIETY HORSE SHOWS PREMIUM BOOK DIVISION V - SOCIETY HORSE SHOW PREMIUM BOOK DIVISION VI - SPECIAL EVENTS PREMIUM BOOK JB PRITZKER GOVERNOR JERRY COSTELLO II DIRECTOR KEVIN GORDON MANAGER Printed by Authority of the State of Illinois #21-269/05-25/400 copies 1 Welcome to the 2021 Illinois Sta te Fa ir! Whether you’re joining us in Springfield or in Du Quoin, our state fairs bring together residents and visitors alike, to celebrate all that Illinois has to offer when we stand together – an all-the- more important mission this year. Illinois’ proud agricultural tradition has long been the force that drives our state forward, and the last 18 months have been no different. In March of 2020, when the world seemed to come to a halt, our state’s number one industry kept right on going. After all, there were still crops and animals to care for, deliveries to make, and people to feed. So, even in the face of a global pandemic, Illinois’ farmers, small businesses and commodity groups all came together to keep our food chain secure, a true testament to the vibrancy of the sector. And because no industry was immune to the pains of the last year, the Pritzker administration directed $5 million to help with livestock losses and other costs through our Business Interruption Grant program.
    [Show full text]
  • Bouverie Preserve Teachers' Packet
    Audubon Canyon Ranch Bouverie Preserve TEACHER’S PACKET 2008-2009 The Mission of Audubon Canyon Ranch, Inc. Preservation, Education, Research To preserve, protect and manage ACR properties as sanctuaries for native plants and animals. To educate children and adults about the natural environment and the need to protect it, through the experience and enjoyment of ACR sanctuaries. To support research and conservation efforts that enhance the preservation and management of the natural resources of ACR sanctuaries. Language Standards Activity: Read the ACR mission statement with your students. Discuss the meaning of any unfamiliar words. Discuss the idea that humans have responsibility for taking care of other living things and the environment. Have the students do a free-writing exercise on this topic, and then read these aloud in small groups or with the full class. This addresses listening, speaking and writing composition standards. 2 TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction ACR Mission* 2 Contents 3-4 Welcome & Introduction 5 Teacher Planning Sheets Activity-Concept Quick Reference 6-7 Academic Standards Correlation Matrix 8-11 Map to Bouverie Preserve 12 Chaperone Letter English 13 Español 14 Bouverie Song (Here we are at the Bouverie Preserve) 15 Bouverie March 16 Thank You Letters to Docents 17 Vocabulary Vocabulary List 18-20 Mystery Directions 21 Concepts Conservation No Garbage Lunch Challenge 22 Habitats Home Sweet Home 23 Communities for Everyone 24-25 Bouverie Preserve Trail Map 26 Trail Map Worksheet 27 Food Chains and Food Webs Once
    [Show full text]
  • Light Horses : Breeds and Management
    ' K>\.K>. > . .'.>.-\ j . ; .>.>.-.>>. ' UiV , >V>V >'>>>'; ) ''. , / 4 '''. 5 : , J - . ,>,',> 1 , .\ '.>^ .\ vV'.\ '>»>!> ;;••!>>>: .>. >. v-\':-\>. >*>*>. , > > > > , > > > > > > , >' > > >»» > >V> > >'» > > > > > > . »v>v - . : . 9 '< TUFTS UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES 3 9090 014 661 80 r Family Libra;-, c veterinary Medium f)HBnf"y Schoo Ve' narv Medicine^ Tu iiv 200 Wesuc . ,-<oao Nerth Graft™ MA 01538 kXsf*i : LIVE STOCK HANDBOOKS. Edited by James Sinclair, Editor of "Live Stock Journal" "Agricultural Gazette" &c. No. II. LIGHT HORSES. BREEDS AND MANAGEMENT BY W. C. A. BLEW, M.A, ; WILLIAM SCARTH DIXON ; Dr. GEORGE FLEMING, C.B., F.R.C.V.S. ; VERO SHAW, B.A. ; ETC. SIZKZTJBI ZEiZDITIOILT, le-IEJ-VISIEID. ILLUSTRATED. XonDon VINTON & COMPANY, Ltd., 8, BREAM'S BUILDINGS, CHANCERY LANE, E.C. 1919. —— l°l LIVE STOCK HANDBOOKS SERIES. THE STOCKBREEDER'S LIBRARY. Demy 8vo, 5s. net each, by post, 5s. 6d., or the set of five vols., if ordered direct from the Publisher, carriage free, 25s. net; Foreign 27s. 6d. This series covers the whole field of our British varieties of Horses, Cattle, Sheep and Pigs, and forms a thoroughly practical guide to the Breeds and Management. Each volume is complete in itself, and can be ordered separately. I. —SHEEP: Breeds and Management. New and revised 8th Edition. 48 Illustrations. By John Wrightson, M.R.A.C., F.C.S., President of the College of Agriculture, Downton. Contents. —Effects of Domestication—Long and Fine-woolled Sheep—British Long-woolled Sheep—Border Leicesters—Cotswolds—Middle-woolled—Mountain or Forest—Apparent Diff- erences in Breeds—Management—Lambing Time— Ordinary and Extraordinary Treatment of Lambs—Single and Twin Lambs—Winter Feeding—Exhibition Sheep—Future of Sheep Farm- ing—A Large Flock—Diseases.
    [Show full text]
  • What Do We Recommend?
    While travelling, we like feeling the city, wake up early with the sun rise, visit all the cultural and historical places and taste the city’s special flavors. According to that concept, we preapared the “Eat, Love, Pray in Istanbul Guide” which is all about our suggestions with little tips. We hope you could benefit from the hand book. Have a good stay and enjoy the city. Ramada Istanbul Grand Bazaar Family SOPHIA PITA RESTAURANT &TAPAS Offers a fusion of authentic and modern Spanish tapas accompanied by a distinguished selection of Turkish wines and selected international wines and liqours, also open for breakfast and dinner with a relaxing atmosphere at the Aya Sofya’s backyard. Adress;Boutique St. Sophia Alemdar Cad. No.2 34122 Sultanahmet / Istanbul Phone;009 0212 528 09 73-74 PS:How to get there;The nearest tram station is Sultanahmet or Gulhane tram station. BALIKÇI SABAHATTİN “Balıkçı Sabahattin” ( Fisherman Sabahattin) was at first running a traditional restaurant left by his father some streets behind which not everyone knew but those who knew could not give up, before he moved to this 1927 made building restored by Armada... Sabahattin, got two times the cover subject of The New York Times in the first three months in the year 2000… Sabahattin, originally from Trilye (Mudanya, Zeytinbag), of a family which knows the sea, fish and the respect of fish very well, know continues to host his guest in summer as in winter in this wooden house...His sons are helping him... In summer some of the tables overflow the street.
    [Show full text]
  • Education's Rural Education Activities: Fiscal Year Puncy for the 80S," a Speech Presented by Assistant Secretary for Addre
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 2g1 285 RC 015 089 AUTHOR Worthington, Robert M. TITLE Report to the Secretary on the Department of Education's Rural Education Activities: Fiscal Year 1984. Volume II. INSTITUTION Department of Education, Washington, DC. PUB DATE 84 NOTE 1. ; For related documents, see RC 015 088-90. PUB TYPE Re.. is - Descriptive (141) EDRS PRICE MFel, 1C06 Plus . DESCRIPTORS *Agency Role; Commi tees; ferences; Elementary Secondary Education; EqualEducation;*Federal Programs; Leadership; Participation; Planning; *Policy Formation; *Rural Education; *Speeches IDENTIFIERS *Department of Education; *Partnerships ABSTRACT This document provides examples of the work of the Department of Education's Rural Education Committee during FY84, beginning with its FY84 management plan. Next, "A Rural Education Puncy for the 80s," a speech presented by Assistant Secretary for Vocational ,nd Adult Education and chair of the Rural Education Committee, Jr. Robert M. Worthington, to the 75th Annual Conference of 4.he Rural Education Association is given, as is his keynote address, "Building Partnerships in Rural Education," to the Seventh Annual Conference of People United for Rural Education. The conference agenda is provided for the Department of Education sponsored national conference, "Building Partnerships for 'Quality Education in Rural America," held in June in Washington, D.C.; the list of participants and conference planning committee follows. "Partnerships in Action," distributed at that conference, lists 21 examples of rural partnership programs. Secretary of Education T.H. Bell's 11-page speech to the conference is included, as well as Assistant Secretary Worthington's opening and closing addresses. The document closes with the Rural Education Committee's FY85 management plan, which reviews the Committee's accomplishments in FY84 and sets objectives for FY85 (including holding another national forum, developing a research and demonstration project agenda, and preparing briefing papers on major issues).
    [Show full text]
  • Intermedial Autobiography Since Roland Barthes A
    UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Los Angeles Between Erasure and Exposure: Intermedial Autobiography Since Roland Barthes A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy in French and Francophone Studies by Lauren Elizabeth Van Arsdall 2015 © Copyright by Lauren Elizabeth Van Arsdall 2015 ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION Between Erasure and Exposure: Intermedial Autobiography Since Roland Barthes by Lauren Elizabeth Van Arsdall Doctor of Philosophy in French and Francophone Studies University of California, Los Angeles, 2015 Professor Malina Stefanovska, Chair In my dissertation, I investigate the trend toward intermedial representations of the self in contemporary French personal writing of an autobiographical type. The theoretical framework of my dissertation is based on notions of referentiality presented in La chambre claire, and in essays contemporaneous to Roland Barthes’s by Jean-Luc Nancy, Jacques Derrida, Pierre Bourdieu, and Jean Baudrillard. As I demonstrate, they are in dialogue with it, all the while exploring the boundaries of self-representation in relation to illness and death. At the outset, an analysis of the discourses of photography in France from the 1980s to the early 2000s informs my discussion of representations of an expected death in works by Alix Cléo Roubaud, Jacques Roubaud, Annie Ernaux, and Hervé Guibert. I argue that the legacy of a Barthesian conceptualization of the photograph obliges writers to rethink their stance towards representing the self. Through gestures of erasure and exposure, they create an intermedial aesthetic coupling writing, photography, and film to explore anew certain taboos concerning self and death. Intermediality opens up the notions of referentiality presented in Roland Barthes’s La chambre ii claire: note sure la photographie— the making of traces through writing, memories, and recording the body.
    [Show full text]
  • 2017 Summerhill Stud Sale of Mares and Weanlings
    “As One Door Closes, Another One Opens…” There is never a good time to do this, more so as it involves the dispersal of the families that have brought international recognition to Summerhill. When our former stud manager John Slade, was assisting with our mating plans last July, he was charmed by the layered evolution of our broodmares through generations of the leading stallions Northern Guest, Home Guard, Liloy, Rambo Dancer, National Emblem, Fard, Kahal and Muhtafal, all of them “top ten” luminaries, several of them national champions in one category or another. While this is an emotional time for all of us, it’s an opportune one for our colleagues. Our good friend Graham Beck, laid the foundations for his stellar successes at Highlands and Maine Chance through his legendary “raids” on their stock, as well as those of the Noreen, Scott Bros. and Hartford studs. For our own part, the partnerships we’d assembled in 1987 were dispersed on their maturity in 1998, and we were left with just 26 mares on the farm; seven years later, through our re- investment in those families, we’d won the first of ten national premierships. Famously, the dams of Jet Master, Royal Chalice, Angus and Pierre Jourdan, among many others, were acquired right here, as was Varsfontein’s “Blue Hen”, Secret Pact. While Summerhill’s successes owe much to the stallions that’ve decorated our barn over the decades, it’s arguable that we’ve never been better served than in the outstanding young sprinter-milers currently doing duty here, Act Of War, Capetown Noir, Willow Magic and Linngari; they comprise the bulk of the covering sires in the catalogue.
    [Show full text]
  • A List of the Vascular Plants of Bender Mountain Preserve (Including Parts of the Delhi Township
    Ohio Biological Survey Notes 7: 21–33, 2017. © Ohio Biological Survey, Inc. A List of the Vascular Plants of Bender Mountain Preserve (Including Adjacent Parts of the Delhi Township Property and Sisters’ Hill) DENIS CONOVER1*, TIM SISSON2, DAN BOONE3, AND MARY M. RIESTENBERG4 1Dept. Biological Sciences, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH 45221-0006; 2Western Wildlife Corridor, P.O. Box 389077, Cincinnati, OH 45238; 33228 Hanna Ave., Cincinnati, OH 45211; 4Dept. of Biology, Mount St. Joseph University, 5701 Delhi Ave., Cincinnati, OH 45233. *Corresponding author: [email protected] Abstract: Several species of non-native invasive plants, including Amur honeysuckle (Lonicera maackii), had become quite numerous at Bender Mountain Preserve in Hamilton County, which made it very difficult for native plants to compete. After the removal of Amur honeysuckle by Western Wildlife Corridor volunteers, there was a resurgence of native plants in the preserve. So far, 431 species of vascular plants have been identified, 73% of which are native to Hamilton County. This list is sure to grow over the next few years as the preserve continues to recover. It is hoped that this study will encourage land managers and park districts not to give up on their nature preserves: non-native, invasive plants can be controlled in natural areas and native plants can come back. Key Words: Amur honeysuckle, native plants, Western Wildlife Corridor, Western Mesophytic Forest Region, Ohio River Valley Introduction Bender Mountain Nature Preserve (N 39.10º, W 084.67º) is a 22.3 ha preserve in southwest Hamilton County, Ohio, consisting of property owned by Delhi Township Parks and Recreation as well as land owned by the Western Wildlife Corridor.
    [Show full text]
  • Appendix A, Annotated Bibliography of Non-Native History and Culture Of
    National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve Copper Center, Alaska For the Love of Freedom Miners, Trappers, Hunting Guides, and Homesteaders: An Ethnographic Overview and Assessment Appendix A: Annotated Bibliography of Non-Native History and Culture of Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve Compiled by David J. Krupa DJK Research and Consulting, Traverse City, MI Incorporating excerpts from: T. Haynes and W. Simeone, Upper Tanana Ethnographic Overview and Assessment, Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve: Annotated Bibliography, and R. Lahoff, T. Thornton, and D. Deur, Yakutat Tlingit Ethnographic Overview and Assessment, Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve: Annotated Bibliography 2018 Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve PO Box 439/Mile 106.8 Richardson Highway Copper Center, AK 99573 www.nps.gov/wrst Completed under a contract between DJK Research and Consulting and the National Park Service, Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve. Note: The contractor completed work on this annotated bibliography in May 2015. It has been edited for publication as an appendix to For the Love of Freedom – Miners, Trappers, Hunting Guides, and Homesteaders: An Ethnographic Overview and Assessment. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY This annotated bibliography of the non-Native people associated with Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve was prepared as the first phase of a larger project to produce an Ethnographic Overview and Assessment (EOA) of the non-Native culture
    [Show full text]
  • 2008 International List of Protected Names
    LISTE INTERNATIONALE DES NOMS PROTÉGÉS (également disponible sur notre Site Internet : www.IFHAonline.org) INTERNATIONAL LIST OF PROTECTED NAMES (also available on our Web site : www.IFHAonline.org) Fédération Internationale des Autorités Hippiques de Courses au Galop International Federation of Horseracing Authorities _________________________________________________________________________________ _ 46 place Abel Gance, 92100 Boulogne, France Avril / April 2008 Tel : + 33 1 49 10 20 15 ; Fax : + 33 1 47 61 93 32 E-mail : [email protected] Internet : www.IFHAonline.org La liste des Noms Protégés comprend les noms : The list of Protected Names includes the names of : ) des gagnants des 33 courses suivantes depuis leur ) the winners of the 33 following races since their création jusqu’en 1995 first running to 1995 inclus : included : Preis der Diana, Deutsches Derby, Preis von Europa (Allemagne/Deutschland) Kentucky Derby, Preakness Stakes, Belmont Stakes, Jockey Club Gold Cup, Breeders’ Cup Turf, Breeders’ Cup Classic (Etats Unis d’Amérique/United States of America) Poule d’Essai des Poulains, Poule d’Essai des Pouliches, Prix du Jockey Club, Prix de Diane, Grand Prix de Paris, Prix Vermeille, Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe (France) 1000 Guineas, 2000 Guineas, Oaks, Derby, Ascot Gold Cup, King George VI and Queen Elizabeth, St Leger, Grand National (Grande Bretagne/Great Britain) Irish 1000 Guineas, 2000 Guineas, Derby, Oaks, Saint Leger (Irlande/Ireland) Premio Regina Elena, Premio Parioli, Derby Italiano, Oaks (Italie/Italia)
    [Show full text]
  • 2009 International List of Protected Names
    Liste Internationale des Noms Protégés LISTE INTERNATIONALE DES NOMS PROTÉGÉS (également disponible sur notre Site Internet : www.IFHAonline.org) INTERNATIONAL LIST OF PROTECTED NAMES (also available on our Web site : www.IFHAonline.org) Fédération Internationale des Autorités Hippiques de Courses au Galop International Federation of Horseracing Authorities __________________________________________________________________________ _ 46 place Abel Gance, 92100 Boulogne, France Tel : + 33 1 49 10 20 15 ; Fax : + 33 1 47 61 93 32 E-mail : [email protected] 2 03/02/2009 International List of Protected Names Internet : www.IFHAonline.org 3 03/02/2009 Liste Internationale des Noms Protégés La liste des Noms Protégés comprend les noms : The list of Protected Names includes the names of : ) des gagnants des 33 courses suivantes depuis leur ) the winners of the 33 following races since their création jusqu’en 1995 first running to 1995 inclus : included : Preis der Diana, Deutsches Derby, Preis von Europa (Allemagne/Deutschland) Kentucky Derby, Preakness Stakes, Belmont Stakes, Jockey Club Gold Cup, Breeders’ Cup Turf, Breeders’ Cup Classic (Etats Unis d’Amérique/United States of America) Poule d’Essai des Poulains, Poule d’Essai des Pouliches, Prix du Jockey Club, Prix de Diane, Grand Prix de Paris, Prix Vermeille, Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe (France) 1000 Guineas, 2000 Guineas, Oaks, Derby, Ascot Gold Cup, King George VI and Queen Elizabeth, St Leger, Grand National (Grande Bretagne/Great Britain) Irish 1000 Guineas, 2000 Guineas,
    [Show full text]