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Planning for geoconservation in the 1940s: an exploration of the aspirations that shaped the first national geoconservation legislation

Proceedings of the Geologists Association, 2013
Abstract In 1949, the British parliament passed the National Parks and Access to the Countryside Act , the first national nature conservation legislation to include specific provision for the conservation of geological and geomorphological features. This Act played a pivotal role in establishing geoconservation as part of nature conservation within ...
Colin D Prosser
exaly   +2 more sources

Geoconservation

2005
The detailed descriptions of the physical geography in the previous chapters show the rich geodiversity of north-western Europe, reflected in its many geological landscapes (landscapes without the biological and cultural ‘furnishing’). The various geological forces, acting in time and space have created the foundation for this richness. The landscape’s
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Geoconservation Research (Geoconserv. Res.)

2018
Biannual Journal of Geoconservation Research (GCR) is an international, open-access (for authors and readers), single-blind and peer-reviewed journal. This journal was established in late 2018. This journal is free for both authors and readers. The GCR tries to follow the open access policy as a global mission to allow all experts, researchers ...
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Energy Production and Geoconservation

2014
Energy production from different Earth’s natural resources has always marked great social and economic advance in the human history. Prehistoric man learned to conserve the fire after the lightning struck down on the forests. Later on, the first energy crisis of the late Paleolithic, when the hunting target began to lack, was resolved by the discovery ...
Delia Evelina Bruno, Dmitry A. Ruban
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Geoheritage and Geoconservation in Australia

Australian Journal of Earth Sciences, 2018
While Australia has a long history in conservation, less well known are Australia’s efforts to identify and conserve important sites of geoheritage significance.
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Geodiversity and Geoconservation

2015
Although nature is often equated with wildlife, it does in fact comprise both living and nonliving elements. The living elements are the plants and animals that make up the world’s biodiversity (biological diversity). Geodiversity (geological and geomorphological diversity) refers to the variety of nonliving nature, that is, the minerals, rocks ...
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