Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- Chumash Indians -- California -- San Luis Obispo Region -- History (1)
- Chumash Indians -- Missions -- California -- San Luis Obispo Region -- History (1)
- Chumash Indians -- Social life and customs (1)
- Crafton Hills Open Space Conservancy (1)
- Environmentalists -- California -- San Luis Obispo Region (1)
-
- Headwater management (1)
- Headwater streams (1)
- Human-Environmental factors (1)
- Hydrologic networks (1)
- Indians of North America -- California -- San Luis Obispo Region -- Antiquities (1)
- Land trusts (1)
- Land use -- Case studies (1)
- Nature conservation -- California -- San Bernardino (1)
- San Bernardino County (1)
- San Luis Obispo County (California) -- Environmental conditions (1)
- Water quality (1)
- Water resource management (1)
- Yucaipa (1)
Articles 1 - 3 of 3
Full-Text Articles in Environmental Education
Identifying Associations Between Human-Environmental Factors And Water Quality Trends Observed At Perennial Headwater Streams Of The San Bernardino National Forest, California, Anna Frey
Electronic Theses, Projects, and Dissertations
Anthropogenic factors related to landscape activities, infrastructure, and alterations, coupled with severe climatic fluctuations (i.e., droughts and extreme hydrological events) are increasingly impairing the quality of surface water resources across multiple geographic scales, warranting the need for comprehensive investigations of the cumulative effects of human-environmental stressors at multiple scales within a watershed. This study assessed three perennial headwater streams of the San Bernardino National Forest, California. The streams were tested for one year from October 2019 to September 2020 for conductivity, dissolved oxygen (DO), pH, turbidity, temperature, ammonium (NH4+), nitrate (NO3-), total coliform (TC), Escherichia coli …
The Obispeno Chumash Indians: San Luis Obispo County's First Environmentalists, Sharon L. Marks
The Obispeno Chumash Indians: San Luis Obispo County's First Environmentalists, Sharon L. Marks
Theses Digitization Project
The primary focus of this project is with the interaction between nature and people. How did the Obispeno Chumash affect their surroundings and what was the outcome? Did changes occur in the environment when other people took over the care of the land? Over the last 250 years, the Obispeno Chumash land has evolved from an ecologically green dominion under their stewardship to the present day where the area is noted for its mission, recreational value, wealth of opportunity, and a nuclear power plant located between Morro Bay and Point Buchon along the ocean.
A Case Study: Process And Techniques Used In Land Preservation Strategies In The Crafton Hills, Yucaipa, California, Albert J. Kelley
A Case Study: Process And Techniques Used In Land Preservation Strategies In The Crafton Hills, Yucaipa, California, Albert J. Kelley
Theses Digitization Project
No abstract provided.