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Journal articles on the topic "Lanas land"

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Sizov, Alexander. "The study of changes in the land fund balance to manage the sustainable spatial development of the developed and developing territories in Russia." E3S Web of Conferences 208 (2020): 08023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/202020808023.

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The analysis of changes in the land fund balance reflects the implementation of the scientific paradigm – “minimum initial information - maximum valid generalizations”. Active indicators, namely the shares of different types of land in the composition of certain land categories from the total area of a certain land category should be a priority. In 2011-2017, the share of settlement lands in the total land fund in the Russian Federation increased from 1.15% to 1.19%, industrial and other special-purpose lands - from 0.99% to 1.02%, which corresponds to modern Russian ideas about the spatial, but extensive, development of territories. The rate of change in the shares of different lands from the area of lands of different categories, %/year, is proposed to use an integrating estimated indicator for the spatial development of territories. The share of agricultural lands in the Russian Federation was increasing in the composition of settlement and industrial lands at a rate of 0.03%/year, which indicates their degradation. The share of forest lands decreased in the composition of industrial lands (-0.09%/ year). These lands served as a “source” of new farming lands for agricultural lands. In the settlement and industrial lands, the share of building land was increasing (0.06%/year), while the share of land under roads was decreasing (from -0.03 to -0.05%/year) due to their unbalanced development. Disturbed lands also need their intensive reclamation.
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Пышьева, Елена, and Elena Pysheva. "Legal Regime of Reclaimed and Improved Lands." Journal of Russian Law 3, no. 7 (June 25, 2015): 0. http://dx.doi.org/10.12737/11752.

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Reclaimed and improved lands hold a special place in the land system of the Russian Federation, which determines the specifics of their legal regime.The article explores the legal nature and content of the legal regime for such lands, identifies their differences. The author gives her own definition of the legal regime of lands. The author notes that the legal regime of the reclaimed land and land plots that form part of those lands is highly differentiated. Therefore the author indicates factors that influence this regime. And it is hydro-technical and agroforestry activities performed on those lands that produce the greatest changes in their legal regime. If lands plots that form part of any land category, are recognized as reclaimed lands, it leads to tightening of the legal regime, because these lands need to comply with strict environmental requirements. Reclaimed lands are particularly vulnerable, especially those that form part of the agricultural zones of settlement lands; that is why the legal mechanism for their protection and conservation was established. The author points out to general deterioration of their ecological state, reduction of land and proposes solutions to these problems through legal means.
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Dalgat, E. M. "ON THE NATURE OF LAND OWNERSHIP IN DAGESTAN IN THE 18th - EARLY 20th CENTURIES." History, Archeology and Ethnography of the Caucasus 13, no. 3 (September 15, 2017): 35–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.32653/ch13335-43.

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The article deals with the nature of land ownership in Dagestan in the 19th - early 20th centuries. Estate and land relations, land and legal problems were the most complex in the socio-economic development of the pre-revolutionary Dagestan. Russian authorities paid much attention to their solution. After joining to Russia, several estate and land commissions were formed and they collected a large amount of material on the estate and land relations in Dagestan. The article covers the forms of land ownership in the 19th - early 20th centuries. There were communal, waqf (i.e. mosque) lands, state and private lands. The latter were divided into large feudal landownership and peasant landownership - myulks. Pastures were in communal ownership and plowing and hay fields belonged to myulks. On the plain, land ownership was communal. State-owned lands in Dagestan appeared due to confiscation of lands from anti-Russian feudal lords and due to the lands of rural societies as well. Waqf lands were those bequeathed to the mosque. Much attention is paid in the article to redistribution of land ownership, when lands passed from one owner to another. There were several great redistributions of lands in Dagestan. The first of them occurred in the 18th century when the feudal lords, in the course of rise of their political and economic power, began to seize peasant lands on the Kumyk plane. By the end of the 18th century all the lands were in the hands of ten princely families. The second great redistribution of lands in Dagestan took place in the 1860s when after the agrarian reform half of the feudal lords’ lands on the plain and in the foothills passed to the emancipated peasants. Rise and development of capitalist relations were accompanied by the growth of extra estate land ownership. Feudal lords actively pawned their lands and gave them to representatives of other estates, in particular, to rich uzdens. Thus, in the late 19th - early 20th centuries there was another redistribution of lands in Dagestan. Considerable changes in the sphere of land ownership occurred in Soviet times.
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Osumanu, Issaka Kanton, Prince Agyekum, and Prosper Laari Bosommi. "Compulsory land acquisition by government and litigations in Ghana: an empirical study of three educational institutions in Wa Municipality." Journal of Planning and Land Management 1, no. 2 (September 7, 2020): 1–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.36005/jplm.v1i2.24.

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This study examined government’s compulsory acquisitions of land for public educational infrastructure development in Ghana, using three case studies in Wa Municipality of Upper West Region. The strategy of inquiry was qualitative, involving key informant interviews with heads of the acquiring authorities and beneficiary institutions as well as semi-structured interviews with pre-acquiring owners and settlers of the lands. The findings revealed that the processes of compulsory acquisition of the subject lands had been delayed, and it is unclear when they would be completed. The processes were not properly followed as determined in the State Lands Regulations of 1962 (L.I. 230) and its subsequent amendments, which provide the processes or procedures for state acquisition of lands under the State Lands Act of 1962 (Act 125), leading to agitations and litigations between landlords and government institutions. The study attributes the problems of compulsory land acquisition to failure of acquiring institutions to follow procedures laid by regulations on compulsory acquisition. It recommends that landowners should be represented in the acquisition process from the onset to ensure fairness and prompt payment of adequate compensation as provided for by the law to reduce tension and litigations between government institutions and landlords.
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SOPIAN, AKHMAD, SIGIT HARDWINARTO, and MARLON IVANHOE AIPASSA. "Gap analysis of land availability and land needs to identify potential development of agricultural lands in Santan watersheds, East Kalimantan, Indonesia." Biodiversitas Journal of Biological Diversity 20, no. 4 (March 24, 2019): 1097–105. http://dx.doi.org/10.13057/biodiv/d200422.

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Abstract. Sopian A, Hardwinarto S, Aipassa MI, Sumaryono. 2019. Gap analysis of land availability and land needs to identify potential development of agricultural lands in Santan watersheds, East Kalimantan, Indonesia. Biodiversitas 20: 1097-1105. Pressures caused by high population growth in various places increase the needs for lands. The aims of this research are to determine the availability and needs of agricultural lands in Santan 1 and Santan 2 watersheds, East Kalimantan, Indonesia as well as to classify land capability which are key aspects in managing land resources. Land availability was determined based on the local actual total production of all commodities, such as agriculture, plantation, and livestock at the sub-district level. Land needs were determined based on the land area required for decent life needs per resident. While land capability was determined using weighting analysis of the limiting factors. Results of this study show that land availability on Santan 1 and Santan 2 watersheds is inadequate to fulfill the needs of inhabitants for agricultural lands. There are 19,053 hectares of lands currently available for agriculture, while there are 56,969 hectares of lands required for agriculture, implying a deficit of 37,916 ha of land. Analysis on land capability shows that lands with eutropepts and tropudults soil with total extent of 16,650,9 hectares are potential to be developed for dryland agriculture, such as seasonal crops, while tropohemist soil is suitable for farmland development, such as lowland rice. The spatial plans in Santan 1 and Santan 2 watersheds do not have adequate lands with agricultural capability since the cultivation areas are situated in VI and VII class with limiting factor of slope and erosion. We find there is undeveloped land in the form of bushes with an extent of 12,989,3 hectares in Santan 1 watershed and 7,055.54 hectares in Santan 2 watershed as potential lands to be developed for dryland agriculture. The results of this study suggest that when establishing neighborhood and hamlet should refer to soil characteristics with certain land capability and cultivation activities not to be done on lands with slopes of >15%.
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Kiptach, F. "Structure and purpose of the major categories of lands of Carpathian region of Ukraine." Visnyk of the Lviv University. Series Geography, no. 38 (December 15, 2010): 119–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.30970/vgg.2010.38.2237.

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The structure of basic categories of lands of the Carpathian region and modern state of their use in region was described. It were substantiated tendencies of changes of lands of a different composition and a special purpose setting. Key words: Carpathian region, land fund, categories of lands, agricultural lands, plough-land, forests, built-up areas.
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Kleinen, John. "The Tragedy of the Margins: Land Rights and Marginal Lands in Vietnam (c. 1800-1945)." Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient 54, no. 4 (2011): 455–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/156852011x611328.

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Abstract This article deals with aspects of official land registers in pre-colonial and colonial Vietnam and their relationship with marginal lands since the eleventh century and especially since the beginning of the nineteenth century. The changing pattern of land ownership and control is studied in detail in one specific village in the Red River Delta of northern Vietnam. Several practices of land use and land distribution are discussed, as are various efforts in parts of Vietnam to expand agricultural land, in particular near rivers and coasts, especially as a result of land reclamation. The study of marginal lands is focused on alluvial lands, which were seen originally as empty or waste lands but gradually developed into safety nets for the poor. The traditional social function of these communal waste lands, managed by village elites, was eroded and became a tool for manipulation in the hands of state and village authorities.
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Kiptach, Fedir. "Optimization of the land use with considering of the landscape structure of the territory on the test sites." Visnyk of the Lviv University. Series Geography, no. 52 (June 27, 2018): 124–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.30970/vgg.2018.52.10176.

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The large-scale landscape maps necessity in developing projects and proposals for agriculture, forestry land-use and erosion protection were justified. Natural conditions of land-use in Babyno community in Stara Syniava district in Khmelnytsk region were described and analyses of the land structure were made. Accordingly, the land structure is characterised by ecologically destabilising lands, including arable lands, lands that were withdrawn from agriculture production and forestry (outbuildings, houses, roads, quarries, exterior use lands) are prevailing. They are covered 89.7 % (in particular, arable lands – 87.3 %) of total community lands. And, vice versa, ecologically stabilising lands (gardens, pastures, grasslands, shrubs, forest belts, forests, swamps, water covered lands) are covered a small percentage – 8.96 of the total research area. Therefore, soil erosion is covered 87.3 % of the total area − a significant percentage. Soil erosion caused decreasing of soil fertility and yields of agriculture. The average weighted losses of humus in the arable horizon of soils (0−30 cm) compared with full-profile standard analogues are 1.1 %. The first step of developing sustainable ecological landscape systems was justified by using a principle of land resource restoration and strengthening of their self-regulation through increasing the area of ecologically stabilised lands by low productivity lands and by their location with taking into consideration a complex morphological structure of landscape systems. Landscape systems of research area were classified by genesis and type of their economic use. Arable lands should cover no more than 45.4 % of the total community area. In particular, 2.6 % is recommended to use for field grain-steam tilled crop rotations and cultivating all agriculture crops of this zone by using intensive agriculture systems and the widespread introduction of their ecological links; 27.8 % is recommended to use for field grain-steam tilled crop rotations and cultivating all agriculture crops of this zone by using ecological systems of agriculture provided soil cultivation, sowing and caring for crops according to the elevation line directions. 15.0 % − for field grain-grass or grass-grain soil protected crop rotations with the total exclusion of row crops. 51.2 % of total community land area should be covered by perennial plants (1.6 %), grasslands (0.9 %), shrubs and forest belts (0.05 %), forests (27.1 %), swamps (0.21 %), lands covered by water (0.54 %). Other 3.4 % are covered by outbuildings and houses (1.2 %), roads (1.1 %), open-casts (0.2 %) and exterior use lands (0.9 %). The results of research helped to justify the rules of the rational use of land area in Babyno community and its analysis suggests that land area of the heavily dissected hills of the forest-steppe stabilising land should occupy at least 50−55 %. Conversely, destabilising – no more than 50−45 % (particularly arable land – 40−45 %). Key words: optimization of the land use, soil erosion, lands, landscape systems.
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Kiptach, Fedir, and Iryna Koynova. "Organization of land use of territory of village of councils based on the landscape." Visnyk of the Lviv University. Series Geography, no. 50 (December 28, 2016): 177–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.30970/vgg.2016.50.8693.

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The large-scale landscape maps necessity in developing projects and proposals for agriculture, forestry land-use and erosion protection were justified. Natural conditions of land-use in Nova Syniava community in Stara Syniava district in Khmelnytskyi region were described and analyses of land structure were made. Accordingly, land structure is characterized by ecologically destabilizing lands, including arable lands, lands that were withdrawn from agriculture production and forestry (outbuildings, houses, roads, open-casts, exterior use lands) are prevailing. They cover 80,6 % (in particular, arable lands – 71,8 %) of total community lands. And, vice versa, ecologically stabilizing lands (gardens, pastures, grasslands, shrubs, forest belts, forests, swamps, water covered lands) cover a small percentage – 19,4 of total research area. Therefore, erosive soils cover a significant percentage – 51,3 % of total area. Soil erosion caused decreasing of soil fertility and yields of agriculture. The average weighted losses of humus in arable horizon of soils (0–30 cm) compared with full-profile standard analogues are 0,5–0,6 %. First step of developing sustainable ecological landscape systems were justified by using a principle of land resource restoration and strengthening of their self-regulation through increasing the area of ecologically stabilized lands by low productivity lands and by their location with taking into consideration a complex morphological structure of landscape systems. Landscape systems of research area were classified by genesis and type of their economic use. Arable lands should cover no more than 52,4 % of the total community area. In particular, 16,1 % is recommended to use for field grain-steam tilled crop rotations and cultivating all agriculture crops of this zone by using intensive agriculture systems and the widespread introduction of their ecological links; 27,9 % is recommended to use for field grain-steam tilled crop rotations and cultivating all agriculture crops of this zone by using ecological systems of agriculture provided soil cultivation, sowing and caring for crops according to the elevation line directions. 8,4% is recommended to use for field grain-grass or grass-grain soil protected crop rotations with total exclusion of row crops. 38,8 % of total community land area should be covered by perennial plants (6,6 %), grasslands (17,0 %), shrubs and forest belts (0,31 %), forests (11,7 %), swamps (1,09 %), lands covered by water (1,2 %). Other 8,8 % are covered by outbuildings and houses (1,2 %), roads (2,0 %), opencasts (0,8 %) and exterior use lands (4,8 %). Key words: forest steppe, landscape systems, land-use, lands, crop rotations.
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FURUKAWA, IKUO. "Land Desertification and Rehabilitation of Desertified Lands." Wood Preservation 23, no. 5 (1997): 247–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.5990/jwpa.23.247.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Lanas land"

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Kruse, Michael. "This Land Is Our Land| A Public Lands Oral History." Thesis, Prescott College, 2017. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10247764.

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There are over 650 million acres of federal public lands in the United States that allow access to nature. Public lands are utilized for a variety of different activities, ranging from preservation to resource extraction. Regardless of proximity, public lands belong to everyone in the United Sates. From January to August 2016, I opportunistically and purposively collected sixteen interviews in Arizona, a state with 38.5% federal public lands, and sixteen in Texas (1.5% federal public lands), to document attitudes, opinions, and ideas about public lands in the United States. Conducting such interviews provides insight into the many different perspectives that people from different areas and backgrounds have about public land, and also acts as a medium for outreach and education. Although the data collected is not representative, it exemplifies different opinions that exist in regards to public land. Opinions such as these can affect management policy and inform how people advocate for public lands now and in the future. I attempted to capture candid responses from the interviewees utilizing an open-ended interview guide to elicit the interviewee’s emotions, reactions, attitudes, and opinions towards public lands. All interviewees appreciated access to nature through public lands regardless of their experience with or knowledge about them. Most interviewees were familiar with national parks, but not all knew about national forests, national wildlife refuges, wilderness areas, or the national system of public lands. Several themes emerged, including issues of access, extractive industries such as grazing and mining, and discussions of federal versus state management.

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Sisneros, Chris. "Understanding Westerners' Relationship with Public Lands and Federal Land Managers Through Attachment to Public Lands." DigitalCommons@USU, 2015. https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/etd/4534.

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The vast swathes of public lands in the western U.S. have long been connected with both the culture and daily lives of the people that live near them. The purpose of this study is to understand the relationship that individuals have with public lands and how that relationship relates to their opinions about the federal agencies (specifically the Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management) that oversee those public lands. This is done through the use of the effective bond attachment to public lands, which is the degree to which individuals feel connected to public lands through both the opportunities they provide to enjoy their desired lifestyle, functional connections, and the ways in which personal identity is tied to those lands, emotional connections. Assessing this bond is done through analysis and interpretation of selected data from the 2007 Public Lands and Utah Communities survey, which looked at a variety of connections Utah residents have to the state’s many public lands. This study utilizes a novel statistical method known as the “inverted-R analysis,” which groups respondents based on answers to a variety of attitudinal measures, to develop three distinct typologies of attachment to public lands. Analysis of differences between the groups of respondents that expressed different types of attachment revealed no correlation between attachment to public lands and opinions about land managers. All respondents expressed generally negative sentiment towards both Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management land managers. However, respondents who expressed a stronger attachment to public lands also demonstrated higher levels of interaction with public lands. Additionally, functional and emotional connections to public lands were shown to operate as two separate parts of attachment to public lands. This reinforces the modeling of the conceptualization attachment to public lands after the related concept, place attachment. This study demonstrated both the strong connections individuals in Utah have with public lands and the strong opinions held about the agencies that manage those lands.
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Murphy, Joseph M. "Unplatted land division's effects on resource productive lands : a study of the Michigan Land Division Act." Virtual Press, 1999. http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/1125087.

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For nearly thirty years, the Subdivision Control Act of 1967 (SCA) was the state statute that governed land division in Michigan. The SCA allowed for an indiscriminant pattern of large lot, rural land division that challenged, if not destroyed, viable land resource production. In 1996, the Michigan Legislature passed the Land Division Act (LDA), which repealed and replaced the title and certain sections of the SCA. The LDA attempts to eliminate many of the results that the former statute had on rural land by establishing fewer division before platting is required and offering incentives to retain greater percentages of the parcel being partitioned. This research examines the current efficiency of the incentives, to retain 60% or more of the original parcel, in Eaton and Montmorency counties, which represent two scenario locations. The findings reveal that the incentives have not been utilized in Montmorency County and minimally utilized in Eaton County. Those unplatted land divisions that utilized the incentives, commonly referred to as "bonus" parcels, are located in rural regions, with predominantly agricultural land cover, in proximity to urbanized areas. The results indicate that the incentives under the LDA have been minimally applied and have not yet helped retain significant portions of resource productive land in Michigan.
Department of Urban Planning
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Gove, Kelley. "Nature as other debating Wyoming's Red Desert /." Laramie, Wyo. : University of Wyoming, 2007. http://proquest.umi.com/pqdweb?did=1313910261&sid=1&Fmt=2&clientId=18949&RQT=309&VName=PQD.

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Thesis (M.A.)--University of Wyoming, 2007.
An interdisciplinary thesis in American Studies and Environment and Natural Resources. Title from PDF title page (viewed on Oct. 31, 2008). Includes bibliographical references (p. 117-129).
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García, González Miguel J. "La desamortización de Mendizábal y Espartero en El Bierzo." [Spain] : Diputación Provincial de León, 1994. http://catalog.hathitrust.org/api/volumes/oclc/33315914.html.

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Al-Jureidini, Sami. "Occupying the void." This title; PDF viewer required. Home page for entire collection, 2009. http://archives.udmercy.edu:8080/dspace/handle/10429/9.

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DeAngelo, Matthew Thomas. "Watershed Management and Private Lands: Moving Beyond Financial Incentives to Encourage Land Stewardship." PDXScholar, 2016. http://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/open_access_etds/3034.

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Public water utilities are tasked with providing high quality, inexpensive water often sourced from watersheds representing a diverse mix of public and private land ownership. There is increasing recognition amongst water resource managers of the role that private landowners play in determining downstream water quality, but bringing together landowners with a wide variety of land management objectives under the umbrella of watershed stewardship has proven difficult. Recently, a large number of "Payment for Watershed Services" programs have aimed to engage private landowners in watershed stewardship initiatives by offering financial incentives for adopting watershed best management practices. However, a growing field of research suggests that financial incentives alone may be of limited utility to encourage widespread and long-standing behavior change, and instead understanding landowner attitudes and non-financial barriers to stewardship program enrollment has become a focus of research. This research examines a population of rural landowners representing a diversity of agricultural, forestry, recreational, and investment objectives in the Clackamas River watershed, Oregon. I designed and distributed a mail and web-based survey instrument intended to measure land uses and land ownership objectives, attitudes towards watershed stewardship programs, barriers to enrollment in stewardship programs, and preferred incentives and goals that would promote enrollment. I received 281 valid responses for a response rate of 29%. I conducted two primary analyses: one focused on relating attitudes and barriers to intent to enroll in a watershed stewardship program, and one focused on identifying how diverse landowners differ according to factors influencing enrollment in stewardship programs. I found that landowners did not report financial considerations to be a primary barrier to enrollment and expressed low interest in receiving financial incentives. Instead, landowners reported that primary barriers related to lack of trust, ecological understanding, and concerns that stewardship program enrollment would be incompatible with their land management objectives. I do not discount the potential utility of financial incentives under certain circumstances, but emphasize the importance of addressing these other considerations before incentives can make a meaningful impact. I compared how barriers to enrollment were perceived by landowners with different land management objectives relating to production, investment, and conservation. I found that landowner attitudes were differentiated from one another primarily by their use of land for production purposes; however, I found a large amount of diversity between producers and non-producers in the degree to which they considered investment and conservation objectives in their land management, and these two variables added further explanatory power to understanding fine-scale differences in how landowner typologies relate to conservation programs.
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Denesiuk, Tania L. ""Uncharted Lands"." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1997. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk2/ftp01/MQ29488.pdf.

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Zhao, Titi. "Community revitalization by reuse abandoned areas Kennedy Town." Click to view the E-thesis via HKUTO, 2009. http://sunzi.lib.hku.hk/hkuto/record/B42664524.

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Lidstone, Allan Bertram. "Planning the agricultural development of crown land in the marginal fringe." Thesis, University of British Columbia, 1985. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/24846.

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The marginal fringe region of Canada is an agricultural area which is near the environmental and economic limits for commercial agricultural production. Combinations of physical factors and social and economic influences result in an area that experiences dramatic shifts in land use and agricultural development. Government policy is, however, a potentially significant controlling and stabilizing factor in the region's development. It is therefore fundamentally important that government plan its diverse functions and responsibilities in the marginal fringe to ensure an effective, equitable and efficient allocation of society's scarce resources. This thesis analyses existing planning programs for the development of agriculture on Crown land in Canada's marginal fringe region. It seeks to determine whether these programs have the potential to ensure the efficient and equitable development of agricultural land. This thesis also addresses the problem of how we should effectively develop our shrinking supply of undeveloped arable land and whether existing planning programs adequately address the major issues in the development process. The methods of investigation include a series of three case studies: St. John's, Newfoundland; Fort Nelson, British Columbia and; Fort Vermilion, Alberta. The case studies are analysed using a framework based on an idealized planning process developed in-the first chapter. This framework is applied to representative planning exercises in each case in order to illustrate the overall planning program's strengths and weaknesses. Based on this broad analysis, I present, in conclusion, the most crucial questions for developing effective planning programs in the marginal fringe and apply these questions to the cases studied. Official reports and surveys, detailed correspondence, personal and telephone interviews, and first-hand experience form the basis for analysis in the case studies. A literature review is the basis for the contextual elements developed in Part I of this thesis. The results of this study raise a number of concerns about existing planning programs for the agricultural development of Crown land in the marginal fringe, particularly in British Columbia and Newfoundland. The crucial issues for developing effective planning programs in the marginal fringe include the need for a clearly articulated, stable yet flexible, program focussing on the marginal fringe region. The agricultural lead agency's involvement is crucial for these programs. Further questions consider how well environmental factors are inventoried, evaluated and communicated to decision-makers; whether adequate socio-economic assessments are permitted; if alternative resource development options to agriculture are considered; whether government programs related to agricultural development are effective or whether they are inconsistent with planning program objectives, and whether the public understand and support the planning program. Planning the agricultural development of Crown land in the marginal fringe is in its infancy. Sudden changes to programs, as in British Columbia, and funding deadlines, as in Newfoundland, are harmful to the efficient and effective development of frontier resources and they erode government credibility. Some jurisdictions, such as Alberta, are making rapid strides in applying many of the traditional planning techniques, although social and economic assessment is very weak or absent altogether in each of the programs studied. Usually, decisions are based on a narrow assessment of environmental factors and there are often significant gaps in essential data, especially climate. Alternative resource development options to agriculture are seriously considered only in British Columbia. Only in Alberta has the vital element of public support begun to be appreciated. Elsewhere, public involvement is, more or less, neglected or mishandled. In conclusion, this thesis raises a number of issues requiring future research, related mainly to socio-economic assessment and planning program development. Also a series-of more detailed normative principles are offered for the improvement of planning programs for the agricultural development of Crown land in the marginal fringe.
Applied Science, Faculty of
Community and Regional Planning (SCARP), School of
Graduate
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Books on the topic "Lanas land"

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Canada. Great Lakes-St. Lawrence Round Table. Lands for Life: Preliminary land use scenarios. Ottawa: Queen's Printer for Ontario, 1998.

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Society, Northwest Indiana Genealogical. Early land sales & purchases, Lake County, Indiana, 1837-1857: An index of land purchases including: First Federal lands, Wabash & Erie Canal lands, swamp lands, lands sold at LaPorte & Winamac. Valparaiso, IN: Northwest Indiana Genealogical Society, 2006.

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Maine. Bureau of Parks and Lands. Submerged lands rules. Augusta, Me: Bureau of Parks & Lands, 2000.

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Hansen, Vaughn E. Cumorah: A land choice above all other lands. Springville, Utah: CFI, 2011.

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United States. Bureau of Land Management. Oregon State Office. Land use plan identification of exchangeable lands: Oregon. Portland, Or: U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management, Oregon State Office, 1990.

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Worth, Henry B. Nantucket Lands and Land Owners. Heritage Books Inc, 1992.

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Adare, Sierra. Greece the Land: The Land (Lands, Peoples & Cultures). Crabtree Publishing Company, 1998.

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Banting, Erinn. Afghanistan: The Land (Lands, Peoples, Cultures). Turtleback Books Distributed by Demco Media, 2002.

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Smith, Debbie. Israel: The Land (Lands, Peoples & Cultures). Crabtree Publishing Company, 1998.

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Thomas, Keltie. Sweden: The Land (Lands, Peoples, Cultures). Turtleback Books Distributed by Demco Media, 2003.

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Book chapters on the topic "Lanas land"

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Reddy, Moola Atchi. "Lands." In East India Company and Urban Environment in Colonial South India, 68–105. London: Routledge India, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003215493-4.

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Memea Kruse, Line-Noue. "Individually Owned Lands and Communal Land Tenure." In The Pacific Insular Case of American Sāmoa, 135–58. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-69971-4_7.

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Grosz, Balázs, Györgyi Gelybó, Galina Churkina, László Haszpra, Dóra Hidy, László Horváth, Anikó Kern, et al. "Arable Lands." In Atmospheric Greenhouse Gases: The Hungarian Perspective, 263–93. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-90-481-9950-1_12.

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Tóth, Eszter, Zoltán Barcza, Márta Birkás, Györgyi Gelybó, József Zsembeli, László Bottlik, Kenneth J. Davis, et al. "Arable Lands." In Atmospheric Greenhouse Gases: The Hungarian Perspective, 157–97. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-90-481-9950-1_8.

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Plieninger, Tobias, Christopher M. Raymond, and Elisa Oteros-Rozas. "Cultivated Lands." In Routledge Handbook of Ecosystem Services, 442–51. New York, NY : Routledge, 2016.: Routledge, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315775302-38.

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Ra'ad, Basem L. "Ancient Lands." In A Companion to Herman Melville, 129–46. Oxford, UK: Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9780470996782.ch9.

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Torre, Angelo. "Separate lands." In Production of Locality in the Early Modern and Modern Age, 64–88. Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2019.: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429457463-5.

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Keiter, Robert B. "“Ancestral Lands”." In To Conserve Unimpaired, 121–42. Washington, DC: Island Press/Center for Resource Economics, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.5822/978-1-61091-216-7_6.

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McKee, Helen M. "Desirable Lands?" In Negotiating Freedom in the Circum-Caribbean, 140–70. New York : Routledge, 2019. | Series: Routledge studies in the history of the Americas ; 5: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429024702-6.

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Jackson, Emma. "Railway Lands." In Walking Through Social Research, 13–19. Abingdon, Oxon; New York, NY: Routledge, 2017. | Series: Routledge advances in research methods; 22: Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315561547-2.

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Conference papers on the topic "Lanas land"

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Velkovski, Valery. "CONCEPTUAL ASPECTS OF AGRICULTURA PROPER MANAGEMENT BY FAT AUTHORITIES." In AGRIBUSINESS AND RURAL AREAS - ECONOMY, INNOVATION AND GROWTH 2021. University publishing house "Science and Economics", University of Economics - Varna, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.36997/ara2021.84.

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In the management of agricultural lands in the Republic of Bulgaria, according to the current legislation, natural persons - owners and users of agricultural lands, legal entities, state bodies and local authorities take part. The Law on the Ownership and Use of Agricultural Land, the Law on the Protection of Agricultural Land, the Regulations on their Implementation and other legal acts regulate the active role of local authorities in the management of agricultural land. This management covers a serious range of tasks and activities, such as: management of lands from the municipal land fund; - consolidation of massifs of agricultural land; reclamation of agricultural lands; exchange of agricultural land; - renting and / or leasing and similar. In addition, local authorities participate in the management of agricultural land, cooperating with the territorial structures of the Ministry of Agriculture and Food and other state bodies. The subject of consideration and analysis in the report are some conceptual aspects of the management of agricultural land by local authorities, and the subject of examination are primarily the legislation in this area and the resulting positive and negative effects of their implementation.
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Ling, Julia, Christopher J. Elkins, and John K. Eaton. "The Effect of Land Taper Angle on Trailing Edge Slot Film Cooling." In ASME Turbo Expo 2014: Turbine Technical Conference and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/gt2014-25579.

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Trailing edge slot film cooling is a widely used method of protecting the thin trailing edge of turbine blades from hot gas impingement. The structures that separate the slots, known as “lands,” come in a variety of configurations which can be broadly classified as either “tapered” or “straight.” This paper examines the effect of the land taper angle on the mixing of the coolant flow with the main flow by comparing three configurations: a case with straight lands, a previously reported case with slightly tapered lands, and a case with strongly tapered lands. In each case, the slot width and the land width at the plane of the slot exit are kept constant. For each configuration, the mean volumetric coolant concentration distribution and 3-component velocity field were measured using Magnetic Resonance Imaging techniques. It is shown that the land taper angle has a strong effect on the mean flow features and coolant surface effectiveness. Furthermore, the impact of the lands configuration on the flow field and concentration distribution is seen not just in the cutback region, but also in the wake of the blade.
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Mazurkin, Peter, and Ekaterina Efimova. "DYNAMIC COEFFICIENT FOR 50 YEARS OF AREA BY CATEGORIES OF THE LAND CADASTER OF THE VOLGA MUNICIPALITY OF THE REPUBLIC OF MARIY EL." In GEOLINKS Conference Proceedings. Saima Consult Ltd, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.32008/geolinks2021/b2/v3/06.

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In territorial planning and forecasting in the conditions of Russia, it is necessary to take into account the coefficients of dynamism of the area of all lands and by categories of the cadastre. On the example of the Volzhsky district of the Republic of Mari El, it can be seen that agricultural lands have contradictory three fluctuations, which decrease in amplitude until 2070. The largest number of fluctuations over 50 years occurred for two categories of lands: 3 - industrial lands (9 wavelets), 7 - stock (8 fluctuations). The maxima in modulus of the dynamism coefficient are as follows: Category 1 - 0.0799 in 1992; 2 - 0.0177 in 1976; 3 - 0.2384 in 1998; 4 - 0.0018 in 2000; 5 - 0.2714 in 1992; 6 - 0.0160 in 1999; 7 - 6.4204 in 2020; all lands of the Volzhsky region of the RME - 0.0135 in 1977. The most dynamic are stock lands. For agricultural land since 1970, there has been a constant half-life of 5.09737 years. In Russia, the Soviet system of land use in agriculture was preserved, and it was aimed at increasing dynamism. In this case, the first and third fluctuations are directed against (negative sign) the growth of the dynamism coefficient. Not enough attention is paid to the dynamics of agricultural land. The third wave will slow down: 1970 with a period of 4.7 years, in 2020 - 4.3 years, and according to the forecast by 2070 - 3.9 years. Such an increase in vibration frequency is already dangerous. Wavelets # 1 and # 4 of stock lands dynamism become especially dangerous, as they strongly influence the future. Stock wavelets # 3, # 5-7 are a thing of the past. And the rest of the wavelets will continue after 2020. Therefore, stock lands require special attention
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Shevchenko, V. A. "Problems and prospects of land reclamation in the non-Chernozem zone of Russia." In Растениеводство и луговодство. Тимирязевская сельскохозяйственная академия, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.26897/978-5-9675-1762-4-2020-183.

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The non-black earth zone of Russia is a zone of guaranteed harvest of major agricultural crops. However, at present, the potential of the reclaimed lands of the Non-Black Earth Region remains largely unrealized. In world agricultural practice, land reclamation combined with the use of modern technical means is an important factor in the development of agriculture, a condition for a consistently high level of agricultural production. Therefore, in all countries, reclaimed lands are given a special status, and the necessary amount of reclamation fund of agricultural lands is created.
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Xu, Jiahui, Song Chen, and Taofang Yu. "Development of industrial lands and influencing factors towards new economy strategies in China." In Post-Oil City Planning for Urban Green Deals Virtual Congress. ISOCARP, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.47472/ytdo4390.

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Industrial lands in China deserve new investigation as China is transferring from the high- speed development mode into new normal economy stage. We measured the development of industrial lands in China in the past two decades. Using urban industrial-construction proportion and location quotient for industrial lands (LQ) as indicators, we found that: (1) Industrial lands were generally growing slower than construction lands, and the national proportion decreased to about 20%; (2) Hot spot provinces, with a LQ above 1, and hot spot capital cities, with a proportion above 20%, were concentrating to eastern regions. After building panel data based on 25 capital cities in 6 years that cover the past two decades, we conducted regressions in different regions and periods. Generally, economic development was significantly and strongly influential to proportions. Industry structures in terms of both second and tertiary industry show negative relationships in the second decade. Industrial land prices were positive related to proportions in eastern regions but negative related in central and western China. Unexpected findings include the negative coefficient of foreign investment and fiscal expenditures on technology and education. Our study provides new investigation of industrial lands towards new development stage and helps raise understanding of factors influencing industrial lands in developing countries.
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Ohno, Yohei, Koji Kikuhara, Akemi Ito, Masatsugu Inui, and Hirotaka Akamatsu. "A Study on the Effect of Pressure Balance Between the Second and Third Land of a Piston on Engine Oil Consumption." In ASME 2014 Internal Combustion Engine Division Fall Technical Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/icef2014-5631.

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Engine oil consumption causes particulate matter, poisoning of catalysts, abnormal combustion like pre-ignition in a gasoline engine, and an increase in customer’s running cost. Oil consumption, therefore, must be reduced. It is well known that pressure at a piston second land sometimes becomes larger than the cylinder pressure in the latter half of the expansion stroke. Larger pressure at the second land causes an increase in engine oil consumption. For reducing the second land pressure, increasing volume of a piston second land is one of design schemes. Pressure at a piston second land is calculated in piston design stage. In the calculation, pressure at a piston third land is assumed as same as pressure at the crankcase. This study aimed the effect of volume of the third land of a piston on engine oil consumption. The third and the second lands pressure were measured using an optical fiber type pressure sensor. It was found that the third land pressure showed a quite different trend from the crankcase pressure. It was also found that the pressure balance between the second land and the third land affected engine oil consumption. It was suggested that the third land pressure should be considered in the calculation for lands pressure of a piston and further investigation on third land design for reducing engine oil consumption may be required.
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Primakov, N. B., and E. G. Tsaloeva. "THE RATIO OF AGRICULTURAL LANDS OF THE KRASNODAR REGION." In 11-я Всероссийская конференция молодых учёных и специалистов «Актуальные вопросы биологии, селекции, технологии возделывания и переработки сельскохозяйственных культур». V.S. Pustovoit All-Russian Research Institute of Oil Crops, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.25230/conf11-2021-292-294.

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The article presents the approaches aimed at optimizing the ratio of agricultural lands of the Krasnodar region. The aim of the work is to analyze the load on agricultural land in the Krasnodar region, to determine the ratio of land in agricultural landscapes, to develop measures to improve the environmental situation on agricultural land. The work studies the load on agricultural land in the administrative districts of the Krasnodar region. We identified (ranged) three zones with different degrees of anthropogenic impact. We presented a set of measures aimed at improving the environmental situation in the agricultural landscapes of the region. The choice of a system of measures will depend on the load on the agricultural landscape.
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Mazurkin, Peter. "ECOLOGICAL CONSOLIDATION OF LANDS IN RUSSIA AND FEDERAL DISTRICTS." In GEOLINKS Conference Proceedings. Saima Consult Ltd, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.32008/geolinks2021/b1/v3/37.

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It is proposed to identify the hierarchy of federal districts in terms of ecological opportunities for consolidation of vegetation cover according to three classes of soil cover according to the UN classification (grass + shrub + trees) on the land territory of Russia by ranking the shares of vegetation cover and human-modified lands, as well as ecological coefficients. The total ecological coefficient is calculated by dividing the share of vegetation by the total share of anthropogenic land. The forest-agricultural coefficient is convenient as the ratio of the forest area to the arable land area. The identification method revealed stable regularities of rank distributions in the form of trends and wave equations.
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Yakimov, N. I., V. V. Nosnikov, and A. V. Yurenya. "RATIONAL USE OF LAND DERIVED FROM AGRICULTURAL USE." In STATE AND DEVELOPMENT PROSPECTS OF AGRIBUSINESS Volume 2. DSTU-Print, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.23947/interagro.2020.2.310-313.

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The article discusses the use of former agricultural lands for afforestation. The fertility of these lands is reduced, low biological activity of soils is noted, the content of substances inhibiting the growth of woody plants is observed. The presence of a compacted subsurface layer contributes to the fact that the root systems of trees are formed by surface and do not reach groundwater. Created forest plantations usually experience a water supply crisis, they die off in dry years, they are easily exposed to diseases and pests. Possible ways of solving problems associated with afforestation in this category of land are suggested.
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Alexandrova, Anna Alexandrovna, and Alexander Arkadevich Sidorov. "ECOLOGICAL AND ECONOMIC CONDITION OF LAND AND WAYS TO IMPROVE IT IN THE VOLZHSKY MUNICIPAL DISTRICT OF THE SAMARA REGION." In Russian science: actual researches and developments. Samara State University of Economics, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.46554/russian.science-2020.03-1-608/612.

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The article provides information about the structure and condition of the lands of the Volzhsky municipal district of the Samara region. Gross and specific parameters of pollutants, waste water, and waste generation are shown (2014-2018). To improve the condition of land, projects are proposed to reduce emissions, waste, discharges, reduce the area of waterlogged land, audit abandoned hydraulic structures and put them on balance; organization of relief, Bank protection, anti-landslide and ravine protection works; reduction of areas of deflation-dangerous and washed away land; restoration and increase of forest cover of the territory.
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Reports on the topic "Lanas land"

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Hinds, N. R., and L. E. Rogers. Ecological perspectives of land use history: The Arid Lands Ecology (ALE) Reserve. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), July 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/5466009.

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DeAngelo, Matthew Thomas. Watershed Management and Private Lands: Moving Beyond Financial Incentives to Encourage Land Stewardship. Portland State University Library, January 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.15760/etd.3029.

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Gray, Andrew N., David L. Azuma, Gary J. Lettman, Joel L. Thompson, and Neil McKay. Changes in land use and housing on resource lands in Washington state, 1976–2006. Portland, OR: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.2737/pnw-gtr-881.

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Ken Haukaas, Dale Osborn, and Belvin Pete. Wind Development on Tribal Lands. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), January 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/922195.

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Donald H. Graves. CARBON SEQUESTRATION SURFACE MINE LANDS. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), May 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/834794.

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Donald H. Graves, Christopher Barton, Richard Sweigard, and Richard Warner. CARBON SEQUESTRATION SURFACE MINE LANDS. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), July 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/822317.

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Donald H. Graves. CARBON SEQUESTRATION SURFACE MINE LANDS. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), June 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/821464.

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Palazzo, Antonio J., Susan E. Hardy, Timothy J. Cary, Kay H. Asay, Kevin B. Jensen, and Daniel G. Ogle. Intermountain West Military Training Lands Planting Guide: Selecting Seed Mixtures for Actively Used Military Lands. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, June 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada507671.

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Burns, Michael J. LLNL/LANS mission committee meeting. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), December 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1043557.

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Donald H. Graves, Christopher Barton, Bon Jun Koo, Richard Sweigard, and Richard Warner. Carbon Sequestration on Surface Mine Lands. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), November 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/890992.

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