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We are excited to announce that the Harris Center has recently acquired nearly 15 acres off Jaquith Road in Harrisville. This small, but significant parcel is surrounded on three sides by other Harris Center-conserved lands, and comprises part of the scenic road corridor along Old Dublin Road in Hancock and Jaquith Road in Harrisville.

 

In addition to its scenic value, more than half the property receives the New Hampshire Wildlife Action Plan's highest ranking for wildlife habitat, and the entire parcel is considered a high priority for conservation by the Quabbin-to-Cardigan Partnership, a landcape-level land conservation collaborative. This purchase was made possible by support from Friends of the Supersanctuary.

National protected area staff, high school students and Peace Corps volunteer Jill Matthews present a book written by local students about the reserve.

Small plots for conserving vines during the dry season in Niassa Province, Mozambique. The work is supported by CIP's partner Progresso

MONTGOMERY, Alabama (March 23, 2016) – Against the backdrop of the Alabama River at the Union Station Train Shed, 300 conservation district supervisors, conservation partners, and students gathered to hear the Alabama Soil & Water Conservation Committee (SWCC) launch a new initiative to continue its mission of conserving Alabama’s natural resources: Conserve Alabama.

 

Visit conservealabama.gov to learn more about the campaign.

MONTGOMERY, Alabama (March 23, 2016) – Against the backdrop of the Alabama River at the Union Station Train Shed, 300 conservation district supervisors, conservation partners, and students gathered to hear the Alabama Soil & Water Conservation Committee (SWCC) launch a new initiative to continue its mission of conserving Alabama’s natural resources: Conserve Alabama.

 

Visit conservealabama.gov to learn more about the campaign.

MONTGOMERY, Alabama (March 23, 2016) – Against the backdrop of the Alabama River at the Union Station Train Shed, 300 conservation district supervisors, conservation partners, and students gathered to hear the Alabama Soil & Water Conservation Committee (SWCC) launch a new initiative to continue its mission of conserving Alabama’s natural resources: Conserve Alabama.

 

Visit conservealabama.gov to learn more about the campaign.

Session 3: Community-conserved areas in the future management of biodiversity, land and water in the Mediterranean

Session 3: La conservation communautaire des espaces dans la gestion future de la biodiversité, du sol et de l’eau dans la région méditerranéenne

Ulcinj (Montenegro) - 28 October 2016

1st Mediterranean Plant Conservation Week “Building a regional network to conserve plants and cultural diversity”

1re Semaine de la conservation des plantes méditerranéennes “Construction d’un réseau régional pour la conservation de la diversité culturelle et végétale”

Photo by Pilar Valbuena for The IUCN Centre for Mediterranean Cooperation.

More information on 1st Mediterranean Plant Conservation Week, please visit:

www.medplantsweek.uicnmed.org/

If you use one of our photos, please credit it accordingly and let us know. You can reach us through our Flickr account or at: lourdes.lazaro@iucn.org

44OR249-17199-AB

 

Missing a handle. Materials included ivory, bone or antler.

When conserving historic buildings the goal is to preserve as much of the original architectural fabric as possible. Untreated wood in direct contact with concrete, masonry, or soil is susceptible to dry rot fungus. To permanently remedy the decaying log joist system, the moisture in the basement must be controlled.

2023–2024 Public Humanities Fellow Perri Meldon spoke to a public audience at the Great Bridge Battlefield & Waterways Museum in Chesapeake, Virginia on January 30, 2025. Meldon presented her research on the cultural and environmental history of the Great Dismal Swamp.

Peter Hedlund/Virginia Humanities

Founded in 1906, Mesa Verde National Park was created to conserve and protect the Ancestral Puebloan archaeological sites and cliff dwellings within the present-day park on the sides and top of a large tree-covered cuesta, known as Mesa Verde, that rises approximately 1,500 feet (785 meters) above the surrounding canyons and valleys, with rugged canyons cutting through the cuesta, lined with sandstone cliffs and ledges.

 

The area was inhabited by indigenous people for thousands of years prior to the rise of the Ancestral Puebloan culture, whom developed villages and farmsteads within what is today Mesa Verde National Park beginning around the year 750, with the structures built by the Ancestral Puebloans growing in complexity and durability, especially due to contact with the nearby culture centered around Chaco Canyon. The famous cliff dwellings for which the area is famous, however, were built between approximately 1020 and 1260, especially after a major drought in the region between 1130 and 1180, which led to a major migration of people from Chaco Canyon to Mesa Verde. The people of Chaco Canyon brought their culture, construction techniques, and goods with them, which is evident at archaeological sites on the cuesta.

 

The area began to depopulate between 1260 and 1285 due to environmental conditions becoming less favorable, with the people of Mesa Verde moving to the lowlands of what is today New Mexico and Arizona, with many founding or joining Pueblo settlements in these regions that still exist today. The stone houses were left to the elements, and were left uninhabited, only remembered by the descendants of the Ancestral Puebloans and the other indigenous groups who called the area home, most notably the Utes.

 

The ancient ruins were discovered by European-Americans in 1873, and were documented between 1875 and 1888, with various cliff dwellings and archaeological sites being relatively well-preserved and recognizable to explorers, archaeologists, and scientists whom visited the modern-day park. However, the removal of artifacts from the cuesta became a major concern, and efforts began in 1889 to protect the area as a National Park.

 

The park covers an area of 82 square miles (212 square kilometers), and features multiple Ancestral Puebloan and other indigenous archaeological sites, and was taken from the Ute people, with land being taken from the Utes after the establishment of the park to expand its borders. The park long struggled with proper interpretation and inclusion of the voices of the Puebloan people, whose ancestors built the ancient dwellings and lived at what are today archaeological sites, with work presently ongoing to redress these issues.

 

The ruins at the park underwent reconstitution and stabilization between 1908 and 1922, with extensive work being done on Spruce Tree House, Cliff Palace, and Sun Temple. Further work was carried out by the New Deal-era Civilian Conservation Corps starting in 1932 and extending through World War II, which included the construction of various park facilities for visitors and staff, and constructing roads atop the cuesta. The Wetherill Mesa ruins, meanwhile, were stabilized with work being carried out between 1958 and 1965, coinciding with the construction of the Far View accommodations atop the cuesta to the east.

 

The park today features a modern entrance road from US Highway 160, which climbs up the rugged slopes at the north end of the park to the top of the cuesta, stretching across the top of the cuesta to the south, where it connects to various roads that allow visitors to access the overlooks and trails for various cliff dwellings and archaeological sites on Chapin Mesa and Wetherill Mesa. Two areas of tourist accommodation also exist at Far View in the northern section of the park, and the administrative district at Spruce Tree Point at the southern end of the park.

 

The park was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1966, and was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1978. Today, the park sees over half a million visitors annually, and continues to preserve and maintain the ancient structures built by the Ancestral Puebloans.

MONTGOMERY, Alabama (March 23, 2016) – Against the backdrop of the Alabama River at the Union Station Train Shed, 300 conservation district supervisors, conservation partners, and students gathered to hear the Alabama Soil & Water Conservation Committee (SWCC) launch a new initiative to continue its mission of conserving Alabama’s natural resources: Conserve Alabama.

 

Visit conservealabama.gov to learn more about the campaign.

As part of its local community efforts and commitment to conservation, Manheim Pennsylvania teamed up with American Rivers on Saturday, June 9 to clean the Conestoga River in Lancaster County Central Park.

 

More than 100 Manheim employees and their family members cleaned up debris from the river and surrounding park area from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. American Rivers volunteers joined in the clean-up efforts.

 

Credit: American Rivers Photo Library

2023–2024 Public Humanities Fellow Perri Meldon spoke to a public audience at the Great Bridge Battlefield & Waterways Museum in Chesapeake, Virginia on January 30, 2025. Meldon presented her research on the cultural and environmental history of the Great Dismal Swamp.

Peter Hedlund/Virginia Humanities

Session 3: Community-conserved areas in the future management of biodiversity, land and water in the Mediterranean

Session 3: La conservation communautaire des espaces dans la gestion future de la biodiversité, du sol et de l’eau dans la région méditerranéenne

Ulcinj (Montenegro) - 28 October 2016

1st Mediterranean Plant Conservation Week “Building a regional network to conserve plants and cultural diversity”

1re Semaine de la conservation des plantes méditerranéennes “Construction d’un réseau régional pour la conservation de la diversité culturelle et végétale”

Photo by Pilar Valbuena for The IUCN Centre for Mediterranean Cooperation.

More information on 1st Mediterranean Plant Conservation Week, please visit:

www.medplantsweek.uicnmed.org/

If you use one of our photos, please credit it accordingly and let us know. You can reach us through our Flickr account or at: lourdes.lazaro@iucn.org

Kumquat Marmalade, confiture, citrus, fortunella, kumquat, 金橘, 桔子, fruit preserves, conserve, jam, canning, pectin

sasrai-Movement’s sasrai Day, Earth Day, World Environment Day Slogan

If resources are preserved, happiness will be conserved.

Saving resources mean - saving the planet.

Use renewable fuels - reduce global warming.

Consume local Product - contribute to environmental preservation.

Eat more native fruits, plant more native trees

Save environment and nature – save happiness of the future generation.

Keep rivers, lakes, ponds, water body Clean - fill life with happiness

Make sure environment is healthy, ensure smooth development.

Plant native trees - in Country, Community, towns, ports and cities

Make sure environment is green, ensure pure peace.

Clogging hill cutting will stop water logging.

Stop building heaps of polythene bags – start building clean city

Elderly, children and youngster will be preserving everywhere.

In workplace, society and family, everyone will be environment friendly.

We will be preserving – happiness will be everlasting.

sasrai-Movement series Presentation in Observance of sasrai Day, Earth Day, Faith Climate Action Week, World Health Day, World Environment Day

sasrai Day –01 Boishakh/April 14 Appeal

Save Forest – Save Water – Save Earth & Life ensure Habitable Earth for Each

www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=1709595609296313&set=...

Mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, fish declined 52%

56 acres of Planet’s forests destroyed every minute

Half of Planet’s wildlife species lost last 40 years

Freshwater species decreased by an alarming 76 percent

Water and food are interdependent

One litre of water to produce one calorie of food

We will fail to feed the world until we fix the water crisis

The world’s thirst for water will grow by 50%. By 2030

https://www.facebook.com/fgaleeb/media_set?set=a.1708192856103255.1073741884.100007376703347&type=3&pnref=story

sasrai-Movement series Presentation in Observance of sasrai Day, Earth Day, Faith Climate Action Week, World Health Day, World Environment Day

sasrai Day –01 Boishakh/April 14 Appeal

Save Forest – Save Water – Save Earth & Life ensure Habitable Earth for Each

•Bangladesh has planned furnish the in Naba Barsha Dish Excluding National Fish Hilsha

•New Study Proves That People Who Don’t Believe In Climate Change Are Morons

•Global warming may be far worse than thought, cloud analysis suggests

•Global Fisheries Are Collapsing -- What Happens When There Are No Fish Left?

•Seas could rise higher than predicted, drenching coastal cities - study

•New York and London could be underwater within DECADES: Scientists say devastating climate change will take place sooner than thought

•6 Colorado Teenagers File Appeal in Fracking and Climate Lawsuit

•Scientists Warn Drastic Climate Impacts Coming Much Sooner Than Expected

•Drilling-induced earthquakes may endanger millions in 2016, USGS says

•Montreal Makes Plans To Ban All Plastic Water Bottles

•Climate Change Will Ruin Hawaii, New Study Suggests

•Global warming to scorch past milestone in 2047, study predicts

•Ocean acidity already crossed threshhold

•Every year after 2047 to be hotter than record-setting 2005, scientists predict

•Worst Mediterranean drought in 900 years has human fingerprints all over it

•Eating Less Meat Could Save 5 Million Lives, Cut Carbon Emissions by 33%

•‘We Have A Global Emergency,’ Must Slash CO2 ASAP

sasrai Day –01 Boishakh/April 14 Appeal

Save Forest – Save Water – Save Earth & Life ensure Habitable Earth for Each

650 million people, even the water they are able to find is unsafe

Water crises are among the top risks to global economic growth

Growing cities, populations, changing climate placing pressures on water

Every minute a newborn dies from infection caused by a lack of safe water and environment

42% of healthcare facilities in Africa do not have access to safe water.

Developing countries half occupied poor water, sanitation and hygiene caused disease

Around 315,000 children under-five die every year caused by dirty water and poor sanitation

That's 900 children per day or one child every two minutes.

2.3 billion people do not have access to adequate sanitation, one in three of the world's population.

In Africa, an estimated 40 billion working hours are spent fetching water

Water in Accra, Ghana, costs three times as much as in New York.

Dhaka’s water tariff of Tk 6.99 per 1,000 litres ‘lowest in the world’.

The biggest threat to the present Planet Earth is Rapid Running Out of the Resources (RRR).

sasrai-Movement must be the Central to Realizing Sustainable Global Development

Ensure Peace, Justice, Dignity, Rights, Prosperity, Security for Each

No matter Climate Changing or Not, Ice Melting or Not – We must stop Consumption Competition

www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.1045800938775669.107374...

 

Bangladesh Cactus and Succulent Society - Conserve the Cacti, Save the World..

 

Wind Farm Altamont Pass, California ~ SEE IT LARGE

 

ANOTHER: V I E W

Moulton Park, top center, is seen on the bank of the Shenandoah River in Jefferson County, W.Va. on Sept. 4, 2023. The park was expanded in 2023, conserving 82 acres that were sold by the Moulton family below market value. As part of the agreement, according to the Chesapeake Conservancy, the "family added conservation goals, stipulating that the land be managed for watershed protection, education, native species protection and soil and forest regeneration, in addition to the family’s legacy of creating recreation opportunities and public access." (Photo by Marielle Scott/Chesapeake Bay Program with aerial support by SouthWings)

 

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