• Shuffle
    Toggle On
    Toggle Off
  • Alphabetize
    Toggle On
    Toggle Off
  • Front First
    Toggle On
    Toggle Off
  • Both Sides
    Toggle On
    Toggle Off
  • Read
    Toggle On
    Toggle Off
Reading...
Front

Card Range To Study

through

image

Play button

image

Play button

image

Progress

1/13

Click to flip

Use LEFT and RIGHT arrow keys to navigate between flashcards;

Use UP and DOWN arrow keys to flip the card;

H to show hint;

A reads text to speech;

13 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back

Renewable resource


Those that are produced as well as consumed. Example fresh water

Nonrenewable resource

Natural resources that either expanded when consumed or they are produced so slowly that they become scarce and dissappear because production can't keep pace with consumption


Strategic values

Include views that certain resources must be managed as part of some strategy to maintain or improve some condition.

Commodity values

Consider resources as goods that can be developed for products.

Aesthetic values

See resources for their beauty

Moral values

Include a broad array of perceptions that resources should be treated ethically and morally.

Antiquities Act

Congress gave the President power to withdraw federal lands from entry and set them aside as national monuments.

John Muir


Embodies the preservation movement. Lived in the woods dodnt want to touch the wilderness.

Gifford Pinchot

"To provide...the greatest good for the greatest number for the longest time." Using resources in a conservative way. Forester. Forst director of us forest service

Rachel Carson

Beware of pesticides

Teddy Roosevelt

Used Antiquities act so much in presidency.

Transcendatilism

A philosophy that connected man, material, nature, and spirituality founder Ralph Waldo Emerson

Hudson River painters

Inspired by Thomas Cole Asher Durand and Frederic Church Albert Bierstadt and Thomas Moran