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13 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
Renewable resource |
Those that are produced as well as consumed. Example fresh water |
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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 |
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Strategic values |
Include views that certain resources must be managed as part of some strategy to maintain or improve some condition. |
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Commodity values |
Consider resources as goods that can be developed for products. |
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Aesthetic values |
See resources for their beauty |
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Moral values |
Include a broad array of perceptions that resources should be treated ethically and morally. |
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Antiquities Act |
Congress gave the President power to withdraw federal lands from entry and set them aside as national monuments. |
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John Muir |
Embodies the preservation movement. Lived in the woods dodnt want to touch the wilderness. |
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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 |
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Rachel Carson |
Beware of pesticides |
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Teddy Roosevelt |
Used Antiquities act so much in presidency. |
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Transcendatilism |
A philosophy that connected man, material, nature, and spirituality founder Ralph Waldo Emerson |
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Hudson River painters |
Inspired by Thomas Cole Asher Durand and Frederic Church Albert Bierstadt and Thomas Moran |