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File PDF document 1990.pdf
Located in Resources / TRB Library
File PDF document 1991.pdf
Located in Resources / TRB Library
File PDF document 1996.pdf
Located in Resources / TRB Library
File PDF document 2004.pdf
Located in Resources / TRB Library
File 2016 Southeastern Forest Private Lands Partnership Forum
March 1, Pensacola, Florida Session Recommendations
Located in Landowner Information / Landowner Forums
2016 Spotlight on National Park Resources
Located in National Park Service Spotlights
2018 Spotlight on National Park Resources
Located in National Park Service Spotlights
File PDF document ‘As Earth’s testimonies tell’: wilderness conservation in a changing world
Too often, wilderness conservation ignores a temporal perspective greater than the past 50 years, yet a long-term perspective (centuries to millennia) reveals the dynamic nature of many ecosystems. Analysis of fossil pollen, charcoal and stable isotopes, combined with historical analyses and archaeology can reveal how ongoing interactions between climatic change, human activities and other disturbances have shaped today’s landscapes over thousands of years. This interdisciplinary approach can inform wilderness conservation and also contribute to interpreting current trends and predicting how ecosystems might respond to future climate change. In this paper, we review literature that reveals how increasing collaboration among palaeoecologists, archaeologists, historians, anthropologists and ecologists is improving understanding of ecological complexity. Drawing on case studies from forested and non-forested ecosystems in Europe, the Americas, Africa and Australia, we discuss how this integrated approach can inform wilderness conservation and ecosystem management.
Located in Resources / Climate Science Documents
File 2023 Shade Your Stream Grant Program Request for Proposals
Non-point source pollution poses many threats to aquatic and human life across the Tennessee River Basin. In 2020, Tennessee River Basin Network partners voiced their concern about this growing threat and the need to collectively increase capacity to address it. In response, the Tennessee River Basin Network launched a Shade Your Stream grant program in 2021. This program supports individuals and organizations that empower people and their communities to effectively safeguard their watershed’s aquatic and human life through outreach and a hands- on, cost-effective, user-friendly riparian restoration technique.
Located in Resources / Upload New Resources
2023 Tennessee River Basin Network Annual Conference
Registration Now Open! | TRBN 9th Annual Conference (Aug 23-24, 2023)
Located in News & Events / Events / Upload New Events