954 resultados para historic preservation


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Two discussions are imposed to the designers of wood constructions. The first one deals with the technical knowledge to project and execute buildings; the second one is concerned with the preservation of the environment, use of the wood in a sustainable way. The work presents the tendencies of the wood used in the Brazilian habitation architecture characterizing the used woods; how the construction technical solutions have developed and discusses about the necessity of using the wood in a conscious way, knowing its origin and control, sustainable use of the forests resources. It focalizes, mainly, the search of the designers to harmonize the use of the wood and the preservation of the forest biodiversity, when it deals with the native forest.

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This dissertation examines the global technological and environmental history of copper smelting and the conflict that developed between historic preservation and environmental remediation at major copper smelting sites in the United States after their productive periods ended. Part I of the dissertation is a synthetic overview of the history of copper smelting and its environmental impact. After reviewing the basic metallurgy of copper ores, the dissertation contains successive chapters on the history of copper smelting to 1640, culminating in the so-called German, or Continental, processing system; on the emergence of the rival Welsh system during the British industrial revolution; and on the growth of American dominance in copper production the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The latter chapter focuses, in particular, on three of the most important early American copper districts: Michigan’s Keweenaw Peninsula, Tennessee’s Copper Basin, and Butte-Anaconda, Montana. As these three districts went into decline and ultimately out of production, they left a rich industrial heritage and significant waste and pollution problems generated by increasingly more sophisticated technologies capable of commercially processing steadily growing volumes of decreasingly rich ores. Part II of the dissertation looks at the conflict between historic preservation and environmental remediation that emerged locally and nationally in copper districts as they went into decline and eventually ceased production. Locally, former copper mining communities often split between those who wished to commemorate a region’s past importance and develop heritage tourism, and local developers who wished to clear up and clean out old industrial sites for other purposes. Nationally, Congress passed laws in the 1960s and 1970s mandating the preservation of historical resources (National Historic Preservation Act) and laws mandating the cleanup of contaminated landscapes (CERCLA, or Superfund), objectives sometimes in conflict – especially in the case of copper smelting sites. The dissertation devotes individual chapters to the conflicts that developed between environmental remediation, particularly involving the Environmental Protection Agency and the heritage movement in the Tennessee, Montana, and Michigan copper districts. A concluding chapter provides a broad model to illustrate the relationship between industrial decline, federal environmental remediation activities, and the growth of heritage consciousness in former copper mining and smelting areas, analyzes why the outcome varied in the three areas, and suggests methods for dealing with heritage-remediation issues to minimize conflict and maximize heritage preservation.

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Highlands College Historic Preservation student, Paul Hart, enjoyed an internship in which he researched and accurately reconstructed parts of the Richard's Cabin at the Nevada City Living History Museum.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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Cover title.

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Title from cover.

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"The Lincoln Legal Papers has also received generous funding from Center for Legal Studies, University of Illinois at Springfield, National Historical Publications and Records Commission, National Endowment for the Humanities, [and] Shelby Cullom Davis Foundation"--P. 2.

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Latest issue consulted: Vol. 52, no. 2 (Feb. 1999).

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Illinois main street matters is a publication of the Illinois Department of Commerce and Community Affairs' Illinois Main Street Program. Illinois Main Street is a preservation-based, downtown revitalization program in cooperation with the Illinois Historic Preservation Agency.

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"Compiled by the Illinois Department of Commerce and Community Affairs, Bureau of Tourism, based on the materials submitted by Illinois' Convention and Visitors Bureaus, Regional Tourism Development Offices, the Illinois Historic Preservation Agency and the Department of Natural Resources."--P. 136.

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Latest issue consulted:Vol. 9, no. 3 (autumn 2006).

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"The papers of Abraham Lincoln is a project of Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum, Illinois Historic Preservation Agency, co-sponsored by the University of Illinois at Springfield. funding for Series I: Legalpapers provided by Abraham Lincoln Association, National Historical Publications and Records Commission, National Endowment for the Humanities, Shelby Cullom Davis Foundation. funding for SeriesII: Illinois Papers and Series III: Presidential papers provided by National Endowment for the Humanities"--P. 2 of cover.

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This project is for the ecological rehabilitation of lagoons and natural communities at 24 parks within the Chicago Park District. The development of Chicago's lagoon system began shortly after the State of Illinois created the Chicago Park District in 1869. The lagoons were expanded over the next 50 years into 14 parks and they have become extremely important ecologic, recreation, and historic resources. A variety of factors over the last 140 years have contributed to the current deteriorated condition of the lagoons which require the expenditure of funds for major rehabilitation activities. Age of infrastructure, erosion, and sedimentation were the natural forces at work; however, the lagoons' popularity and lack of comprehensive management plan also contributed. All of the lagoons are eligible to be listed on the National Register of Historic places as major contributing features. Additionally, the lagoons in Columbus, Garfield, Humboldt, Jackson, Lincoln, Sherman and Washington Parks are historic landmarks. The Park District has already invested over $5 million for partial lagoon restoration at Humboldt, Douglas, Sherman, McKinley, Riis and Garfield Parks, and additional work is required.

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Bibliography: p. [92]-99.

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Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2016-06