Bowser
09-23-00, 08:24 PM
Allen Kenitzer September 19, 2000
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
(Phone: )
Annette Trinity-Stevens
Montana State University, Bozeman, Mont.
(Phone: )
Release No. 00-116/Notice to Editors/News Directors
NATIONAL CONFERENCE TO DISCUSS CHANGING RURAL LANDSCAPES
A NASA sponsored conference to discuss urban sprawl in America
will be held at Mammoth Hot Springs in Yellowstone National Park,
Wyo., on Sept. 22-24.
"The size and character of the populations of rural areas are
changing rapidly, as are their livelihoods," said Andrew Hansen,
associate professor of ecology at Montana State University-Bozeman.
"These socioeconomic trends are dramatically altering patterns of
land use and land cover, with important consequences for ecosystems
and human communities. To understand the causes and consequences of
these changes, a multidisciplinary approach is needed to involve
social scientists, ecologists, geospatial technology specialists and
land managers."
"Changing Landscapes of Rural America" will be open to the
public and should be of special interest to county commissioners,
land managers, private developers, realtors and other people
concerned about changes in land use, Hansen added.
Wild fires, the rates of loss of agriculture land to urban
sprawl, the rural population rebound in the upper Midwest, the
ecological basis of the "New West" economy and new tools for
measuring and understanding these changes are among the topics to be
discussed.
"No matter where people live in the country, they see urban
sprawl," said Hansen. "They see more cars on the highways. They see
changes in land use that can only be described as 'stunning.' But
most people don't know how much the rural landscape is changing. They
may not realize that, for only the second time in 100 years, more
people are moving into rural areas than away from them. They haven't
had the opportunity to discuss the consequences.
Speakers will include the top land use experts in the nation,
such as Garik Gutman of NASA's Land Cover Land Use Change Program.
Many of the research projects to be discussed are funded by NASA's
Earth Science Enterprise, and presentations will be illustrated with
the latest satellite photos and other imagery provided by NASA
technology. NASA, MSU, the Montana EPSCoR Program and Gallatin
Writers, Inc., are funding the conference.
"The whole package is going to be eye-opening," Hansen said.
"People are going to say, 'I had no idea.'"
The public portion of the conference will begin Saturday, Sept.
23, with a talk on "Land Use, Ecology and Society: The Current
Frontier" by Daniel Brown of the University of Michigan. Brown is
coordinating the conference with Hansen. The rest of the morning and
the first part of the afternoon will focus on land use trends, rates
and concepts. The latter part of the afternoon will be devoted to
case studies showing ecological and socioeconomic causes and
consequences of land use changes. Gutman will speak at 8 p.m. on the
NASA Land Cover Land Use Change Program. Popular Montana humorist
Greg Keeler will provide the entertainment.
Sunday's sessions will look at decision support and management.
One talk from 2 to 2:30 p.m. will be given by a Yellowstone National
Park official discussing "Managing Nature Reserves in the Context of
Surrounding Private Lands." The formal meetings will end at 5 p.m.
One purpose of the conference is to synthesize the findings of
scientists who have been working on rural land use topics, Hansen
said. He hopes the conference will lead to future collaborations for
the researchers and greater understanding for those attending the
conference.
"These talks will put meat on the bones of what people are
already saying and feeling," he commented. "These talks will show the
world is a different place than 20 years ago, but nobody has had a
finger on the pulse of these changes -- up until now."
The Land Cover Land Use Change Program is part of NASA's Earth
Science Enterprise; a long-term research program designed to study
the Earth's land, oceans, air, ice and life as a total system.
For more information, send an e-mail to Hansen at hansen@montana.edu
or check the web at: http://www.homepage.montana.edu/~hansen/hansen/lab/documents/conferenc
e.htm
-end-
------------------
It's all very large.
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
(Phone: )
Annette Trinity-Stevens
Montana State University, Bozeman, Mont.
(Phone: )
Release No. 00-116/Notice to Editors/News Directors
NATIONAL CONFERENCE TO DISCUSS CHANGING RURAL LANDSCAPES
A NASA sponsored conference to discuss urban sprawl in America
will be held at Mammoth Hot Springs in Yellowstone National Park,
Wyo., on Sept. 22-24.
"The size and character of the populations of rural areas are
changing rapidly, as are their livelihoods," said Andrew Hansen,
associate professor of ecology at Montana State University-Bozeman.
"These socioeconomic trends are dramatically altering patterns of
land use and land cover, with important consequences for ecosystems
and human communities. To understand the causes and consequences of
these changes, a multidisciplinary approach is needed to involve
social scientists, ecologists, geospatial technology specialists and
land managers."
"Changing Landscapes of Rural America" will be open to the
public and should be of special interest to county commissioners,
land managers, private developers, realtors and other people
concerned about changes in land use, Hansen added.
Wild fires, the rates of loss of agriculture land to urban
sprawl, the rural population rebound in the upper Midwest, the
ecological basis of the "New West" economy and new tools for
measuring and understanding these changes are among the topics to be
discussed.
"No matter where people live in the country, they see urban
sprawl," said Hansen. "They see more cars on the highways. They see
changes in land use that can only be described as 'stunning.' But
most people don't know how much the rural landscape is changing. They
may not realize that, for only the second time in 100 years, more
people are moving into rural areas than away from them. They haven't
had the opportunity to discuss the consequences.
Speakers will include the top land use experts in the nation,
such as Garik Gutman of NASA's Land Cover Land Use Change Program.
Many of the research projects to be discussed are funded by NASA's
Earth Science Enterprise, and presentations will be illustrated with
the latest satellite photos and other imagery provided by NASA
technology. NASA, MSU, the Montana EPSCoR Program and Gallatin
Writers, Inc., are funding the conference.
"The whole package is going to be eye-opening," Hansen said.
"People are going to say, 'I had no idea.'"
The public portion of the conference will begin Saturday, Sept.
23, with a talk on "Land Use, Ecology and Society: The Current
Frontier" by Daniel Brown of the University of Michigan. Brown is
coordinating the conference with Hansen. The rest of the morning and
the first part of the afternoon will focus on land use trends, rates
and concepts. The latter part of the afternoon will be devoted to
case studies showing ecological and socioeconomic causes and
consequences of land use changes. Gutman will speak at 8 p.m. on the
NASA Land Cover Land Use Change Program. Popular Montana humorist
Greg Keeler will provide the entertainment.
Sunday's sessions will look at decision support and management.
One talk from 2 to 2:30 p.m. will be given by a Yellowstone National
Park official discussing "Managing Nature Reserves in the Context of
Surrounding Private Lands." The formal meetings will end at 5 p.m.
One purpose of the conference is to synthesize the findings of
scientists who have been working on rural land use topics, Hansen
said. He hopes the conference will lead to future collaborations for
the researchers and greater understanding for those attending the
conference.
"These talks will put meat on the bones of what people are
already saying and feeling," he commented. "These talks will show the
world is a different place than 20 years ago, but nobody has had a
finger on the pulse of these changes -- up until now."
The Land Cover Land Use Change Program is part of NASA's Earth
Science Enterprise; a long-term research program designed to study
the Earth's land, oceans, air, ice and life as a total system.
For more information, send an e-mail to Hansen at hansen@montana.edu
or check the web at: http://www.homepage.montana.edu/~hansen/hansen/lab/documents/conferenc
e.htm
-end-
------------------
It's all very large.