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Integrating Cultural Resource Preservation at a Landscape Scale

A collaborative research project sponsored by the National Park Service and the Appalachian LCC seeks to integrate cultural resources, such as historic bridges and Civil War Battlefields, into landscape conservation planning and design to emphasize both natural and cultural resources in defining conservation priorities.

The goals of this research is to address the threats of land-use conversion associated with energy expansion, urbanization, sprawl, and climate change on cultural resources that society values. In order to integrate cultural resources into landscape-scale conservation planning and design, researchers at Penn State University will first identify relevant resources and data requirements, while investigating issues of scale and data availability appropriate for spatial analysis and modeling. They will then identify a process appropriate to apply at the larger scale, moving from a single state to include the entire Appalachian LCC 15-state geography.

Learn more about the research.

Integrating cultural resource priorities within landscape-level planning and modeling is foundational to the LCC's Landscape Conservation Design, which will guide the Cooperative's coordination and collaborative conservation actions over the next several years.

This research's immediate objectives include:

  1. Identify and describe conservation priorities related to cultural resources;
  2. Evaluate data requirements for Appalachian LCC-scale analysis and determine procedures for analysis;
  3. Establish measures for objective analysis of cultural resource conservation priorities; and
  4. Investigate existing and potential land-use changes for establishing cultural resource conservation principles.

Jointly funded by the National Park Service and the Appalachian LCC.

Throughout the entire Appalachian LCC geography.
Integrating Cultural Resource Preservation at a Landscape Scale
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