Tuscan Landscapes

Tuscan Landscapes

Author: Tony Tripodi

Publisher: iUniverse

Published: 2005-09

Total Pages: 53

ISBN-13: 059537025X

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Tuscan Landscapes is a collection of poems that represent impressions of Tuscany. Immerse yourself in the sights, sounds, tastes, and smells of this Renaissance land - the next best thing to being there!


Landscapes of Tuscany

Landscapes of Tuscany

Author: Elizabeth Mizon

Publisher: Hunter Publishing, Inc

Published: 2002

Total Pages: 158

ISBN-13: 9781856912174

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This guide to Malta, Gozo and Comina includes: topographical walking maps; fold-out touring maps; many short walks and picnic suggestions - suitable for hot summer days and for those with young children; and an update service with specific route-change information.


Modern Approaches to the Visualization of Landscapes

Modern Approaches to the Visualization of Landscapes

Author: Dennis Edler

Publisher: Springer Nature

Published: 2021-01-31

Total Pages: 553

ISBN-13: 3658309563

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The volume deals with the effects of digitization on spatial and especially landscape construction processes and their visualization. A focus lies on the generation mechanisms of 'landscapes' with digital tools of cartography and geomatics, including possibilities to model and visualize non-visual stimuli, but also spatial-temporal changes of physical space. Another focus is on how virtual spaces have already become part of the social and individual construction of landscape. Potentials of combining modern media of spatial visualization and (constructivist) landscape research are discussed.


European Landscapes in Transition

European Landscapes in Transition

Author: Teresa Pinto-Correia

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2018-01-25

Total Pages: 317

ISBN-13: 1107070694

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A presentation of the challenges of European rural landscape management, exploring alternatives that incorporate place-based approaches.


The Conservation of Cultural Landscapes

The Conservation of Cultural Landscapes

Author: Mauro Agnoletti

Publisher: CABI

Published: 2006-10-23

Total Pages: 298

ISBN-13: 1845931548

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Landscape today is no longer just a cultural aspect, intended as an elitist phenomenon, but emerges as an essential element in the definition and the application of a modern approach in sustainable development. Historical locally adapted distinctive and ingenious combinations of management practices have contributed and continue to contribute tremendously to the biodiversity of the world, resulting not only in outstanding aesthetic beauty, but, in the sustained provision of multiple goods and services, food and livelihood security and quality of life. The development of policies to preserve and manage landscape resources, has to face both the degradation of cultural landscape due to socio-economic development and the need to develop appropriate methods and approaches. This book presents different methodologies developed to analyse, manage and plan landscape resources. It reports recent research findings and case studies from Europe and North America, suggesting also the revision of some orientations and views of the current policies concerning forestry, rural development and nature conservation, often contributing to degrade cultural landscapes.


Landscape Bionomics Biological-Integrated Landscape Ecology

Landscape Bionomics Biological-Integrated Landscape Ecology

Author: Vittorio Ingegnoli

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2015-03-03

Total Pages: 448

ISBN-13: 8847052262

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"Landscape Bionomics,” or “Bio-integrated Landscape Ecology,” radically transforms the main principles of traditional Landscape Ecology by recognizing the landscape as a living entity rather than merely the spatial distribution of species and communities on the territory, often analysed in separate themes (water, species, pollution, etc.). To be more exact, the landscape is identified as the "life organization integrating a set of plants, animals and human communities and its system of natural, semi-natural, and human cultural ecosystems in a certain spatial configuration." This new perspective inevitably leads to significant changes in how to assess and manage the environment. This book represents the culmination of an endeavor begun by the author, with the support of Richard Forman and Zev Naveh, more than a dozen years ago. It builds on the author’s previous successful publication, Landscape Ecology, A Widening Foundation, by addressing a range of additional topics and discussing the new theoretical and methodological concepts that have emerged during the past decade of research. Particular attention is paid to the fact that interventions in the landscape can be made with the best intentions yet cause serious damage! Against this background, the author explains the need to study "landscape units" by applying methods comparable to those used in clinical diagnosis – hence ecologists can be viewed as the “physicians” of ecological systems.