نتایج جستجو برای: wilderness diarrhea

تعداد نتایج: 34280  

2012
Matt Homstad

The purpose of this paper is to present sufficient evidence that wilderness group therapy is capable of acting as the ideal treatment modality for adolescent survivors of sexual abuse. Existing literature regarding adolescent development, childhood sexual victimization, treating this population, and the nature of wilderness group therapy has been consulted, synthesized, and is presented here. T...

2002
Steven Lawson Robert Manning

ilderness management researchers and practitioners have long recognized that wilderness experiences are influenced by the social conditions experienced (e.g., the number of other groups encountered), the resource conditions experienced (e.g., the amount of human impact at camping sites), and the management conditions imposed (e.g., the number of backcountry permits issued; Hendee et al. 1990). ...

2000
David N. Cole William E. Hammitt

Increasingly, wilderness managers must choose between the objective of wildness (“untrammeled” wilderness) and the objectives of naturalness and solitude. This dilemma has surfaced with awareness of the pervasiveness of human influence in wilderness and that regulation is often the only way to maintain outstanding opportunities for solitude. Should we trammel wilderness to compensate for unnatu...

2016
William T. Borrie Robert G. Dvorak

Wilderness managers strive to provide quality recreation experiences. Because of this commitment, a need exists to further incorporate experiential aspects into current planning and management frameworks. This article suggests a focus on relationships with wilderness, moving beyond the examination of single transactions with a setting toward a consideration of the dynamic engagements visitors a...

2000
Carolyn Alkire

169 In: McCool, Stephen F.; Cole, David N.; Borrie, William T.; O’Loughlin, Jennifer, comps. 2000. Wilderness science in a time of change conference— Volume 2: Wilderness within the context of larger systems; 1999 May 23–27; Missoula, MT. Proceedings RMRS-P-15-VOL-2. Ogden, UT: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station. Carolyn Alkire is Resource Economist,...

Journal: :Current Biology 2016
James E.M. Watson Danielle F. Shanahan Moreno Di Marco James Allan William F. Laurance Eric W. Sanderson Brendan Mackey Oscar Venter

Humans have altered terrestrial ecosystems for millennia [1], yet wilderness areas still remain as vital refugia where natural ecological and evolutionary processes operate with minimal human disturbance [2-4], underpinning key regional- and planetary-scale functions [5, 6]. Despite the myriad values of wilderness areas-as critical strongholds for endangered biodiversity [7], for carbon storage...

2009
Lynn Anderson

There is a growing body of research documenting the benefits of outdoor adventure and wilderness-based programs with a variety of special populations. Criticisms of this body of research are that it is not grounded in theory and it is outcome-based, with no investigation into the processes causing the behavior change in individuals. This study attempted to investigate the processes that occurre...

Journal: :Environmental management 2009
David N Cole Troy E Hall

Understanding how setting attributes influence the nature of the visitor experience is crucial to effective recreation management. Highly influential attributes are useful indicators to monitor within a planning framework, such as Limits of Acceptable Change. This study sought to identify the setting attributes perceived to have the most profound effect on the ability to have "a real wilderness...

2000
Yu-Fai Leung Jeffrey L. Marion

This paper reviews the body of literature on recreation resource impacts and their management in the United States, with a primary focus on research within designated wildernesses during the past 15 years since the previous review (Cole 1987b). Recreation impacts have become a salient issue among wilderness scientists, managers and advocates alike. Studies of recreation impacts, referred to as ...

2003
Bruce J. McGurk David L. Azuma

Since 1982, under an agreement between the California Department of Water Resources and the USDA Forest Service, snow sensors have been installed and operated in Forest Service-administered wilderness areas in the Sierra Nevada of California. The sensors are to be removed by 2005 because of the premise that sufficient data will have been collected to allow "correlation" and, by implication, pre...

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