Saturday, December 11, 2010
Wakarusa Watershed memetics researcher
![]() |
Clear Creek Watershed Impact Zones |
Labels: distributed learning, eco-challenge, eco-history, geotourism, national heritage trail, Planet U, social geocoding, social responsibility, watershed
Monday, October 25, 2010
Grand Tetons NP GeoVenturing
Labels: eco-history, geotourism, PlanetU, watershed
Friday, September 18, 2009
Google Earth KMZ/KML to GPS converter (Demo)
Labels: distributed learning, geotourism, national heritage trail, outdoor recreation, watershed
Capture Google Earth Routes with a Garmin GPS
You will need:
1-Google Earth
2-KML To GPX Converter 2
3-MapSource (Or EasyGPS)
Labels: distributed learning, geotourism, national heritage trail
Using Google Maps with Garmin GPS Devices
Follow along with Jake from the Garmin Blog Team as he shows users how to send Google Map information directly to your Garmin GPS device.
Visit http://garmin.blogs.com for more information
Labels: agritourism, geotourism, OCTA-Trails Marker, outdoor recreation, Planet U, watershed
Friday, June 12, 2009
NatGeoMaps Contours 2009 Pathfinder

During Jan-2001, I began pre-staging my (Pathfinder Passports) Enviro-Education mission ...
Features: A Watershed Moment
How a fourth-grade classroom launched a network to restore fragile creeksand their endangered inhabitantsby Michael K. StoneOn a crisp late-January morning in 2001, I'm on my way to Paul Martin'sranch in southern Sonoma County, California.via http://www.bioneers.org/education
USNR-Ret. (KU Sigma Nu ... Social Responsibility Pathfinders)
via http://futurethought.pbwiki.com/FFNHA%20Hyperportal ...
Prairie Passage "Eco-Futurist" / geoWIZard / "EarthSea-Keeper"
via http://futurethought.pbwiki.com/tags.php?ptag=MentorshipART
Labels: agritourism, eco-challenge, geotourism, outdoor recreation, social responsibility, watershed
Saturday, May 23, 2009
FIFTH Freedom's natural heritage adVenturing (FFnha)
Labels: “Blog Action Day”, distributed learning, eco-challenge, eco-history, geotourism, national heritage trail, OCTA-Trails Marker, outdoor recreation, Planet U, social responsibility, watershed
Thursday, April 23, 2009
Healthy Us ... Happy Earth


Experience Dragonfly County Neuroscapes
Labels: “Blog Action Day”, distributed learning, eco-challenge, geotourism, outdoor recreation, Planet U, social responsibility, watershed
Sunday, January 25, 2009
FIFTH Freedom natural history adVenturing (FFnha)
became the 200th posting since Pathfinder Passports began.
Crafting No Child Left Inside ARTifacts for adaptive outdoor recreation "Eco-Challenges"
Empower consequential learning for "Know Your Wilderness Inquiry Zones" (WIZ)
Our 2009 Podstock Festival Trails-n-Tails" (TnT) theme:
[A] Reflects actionable distilled insights (WIZdom) for "EarthSea-Keeping" group activities
[B] Builds on FutureThought Leadership experiences with blended "Visual Learning" hyperportals
[C] Creates sharable community stewardship stories
about "geoWIZard" MentorshipART ... Rev: 25-Jan-2008
Att-1: NAIS-2006 Education Futures Flat World HotTopics PPT
Att-2: Minnesota Futurist Steve Troutman's Virtual Team PPT Slides
Att-3: WorldFutures 2007-07 The Future of Teams Panel PPT Slides
Labels: “Blog Action Day”, distributed learning, eco-challenge, eco-history, geotourism, leapfrog, outdoor recreation, Planet U, social responsibility, watershed
Monday, November 10, 2008
geoWIZard3 Eco-Region Profile
North America
I | INTRODUCTION |
North America, third largest of the seven continents, including Canada (the 2nd largest country in area in the world), the United States (3rd largest), and Mexico (14th largest). The continent also includes Greenland, the largest island, as well as the small French overseas department of Saint-Pierre and Miquelon and the British dependency of Bermuda (both made up of small islands in the Atlantic Ocean). With 524 million inhabitants (2007 estimate), North America is the 4th most populous continent; the United States ranks 3rd and Mexico 11th in population among the world's countries. Canada and the United States have technologically developed early modern economies, and Mexico, although less technologically developed than its neighbors, contains some of the world's greatest deposits of petroleum and natural gas.
Together with Central America, the West Indies, and South America, North America makes up the Western Hemisphere of Earth. North America is sometimes defined to include Central America and the West Indies, which are treated separately in Encarta Encyclopedia. The name America is derived from that of Italian navigator Amerigo Vespucci, who may have visited the mainland of North America in 1497 and 1498.
III | THE PEOPLE |
North America was sparsely populated until relatively recent times. With the conspicuous exception of the inhabitants of the Mexican heartland (the plateaus and valleys around present-day Mexico City), the indigenous peoples of the continent were geographically scattered and culturally diverse. The settlement of the continent by Europeans began an almost total change in its human geography; Europeans decimated and displaced the indigenous peoples, and the living patterns of most were greatly altered. The contemporary population of North America is mostly European in background, but the continent's population also contains many other important groups.
A | Ethnography |
At least 35 percent of Canada's inhabitants trace their ancestry to the British Isles, and another 25 percent are of French background; the latter live mostly in Québec Province. The country also has significant numbers of people of German, Italian, Polish, Ukrainian, Chinese, Dutch, and Scandinavian descent. The population of the United States is more diverse than Canada's. In 1990, people of at least part British or part Irish background formed the largest group, with approximately 29 percent of the country's inhabitants.
Blacks, who trace their ancestry to Africa, make up 12 percent of the population, Germans 23 percent, and people of Hispanic background 9 percent. The country also has large numbers of people of Italian, Polish, French, Russian, Dutch, and Scandinavian ancestry. Persons of Asian origin—primarily Japanese, Chinese, Filipinos, Asian Indians, Koreans, and Vietnamese—make up only 2.9 percent of the population of the United States, but since the 1970s the number of Asians increased significantly through immigration.
Indigenous peoples, including Inuit and Eskimo, number 1.9 million in the United States and 800,000 in Canada. It is believed that the ancestors of the Native Americans migrated from northeastern Asia to North America via a prehistoric land bridge across the modern Bering Strait, off Alaska, that existed from about 25,000 to nearly 10,000 years ago. The forebears of the Inuit migrated from Asia by boat some 6,000 years ago. Some 30,000 Inuit live in Greenland.
Some 60 percent of the people of Mexico are mestizos, persons of mixed Native American and European (mainly Spanish) descent. Approximately 30 percent of the population is of relatively pure Native American ancestry, and some 10 percent is of unmixed European descent.
B | Demography |
In 2007 the United States had 301,139,950 inhabitants; Mexico 108,700,890; Canada 33,390,141; and Greenland 56,344. Most of the population was concentrated in the eastern half of the United States and adjacent parts of Ontario and Québec, the U.S. Pacific coast, and the central plateau of Mexico. In the late 1990s more than 76 percent of the inhabitants of Canada, the United States, and Greenland were defined as urban, as were 74 percent of all Mexicans. The principal urban areas were on the U.S. Atlantic coast from Boston to Washington, D.C., around the shores of Lakes Erie and Ontario, at the southern end of Lake Michigan, in northern and southern California, and greater Mexico City.
The largest cities included Mexico City, Guadalajara, and Monterrey, in Mexico; New York City, Los Angeles, Chicago, Houston, Philadelphia, and San Diego, in the United States; and Toronto, Montréal, Vancouver, Ottawa, and Edmonton, in Canada. Away from the metropolitan areas, most of North America had only a sparse to moderate population density. In Mexico the overall population density was 56.5 persons per sq km (146.3 per sq mi); in the United States, 32.9 per sq km (85.2 per sq mi); and in Canada, 3.7 per sq km (9.6 per sq mi). The great majority of Canadians lived in a relatively narrow band along the southern boundary.
In both Canada and the United States the rate of population increase has declined since the 1950s. The Canadian population increased by about 1 percent per year from 1980 to 1990, when the annual growth rate for the United States was also 1 percent and for Greenland, 1.2 percent. Mexico, however, had one of the hemisphere's highest rates of population increase, 2.2 percent per year, and its birth rate (20.4 per 1,000 people in 2007) was about double that of the rest of the continent. The death rate was 5 per 1,000 people in Mexico, 8 in Canada, and 8 in the United States
Intercontinental migration to North America was significant in the 1980s and 1990s, with large numbers of Asians and Europeans going to the United States and Canada. In addition, many people moved from South American and Caribbean countries to the United States. The largest population movements, however, occurred within North America itself, from Mexico to the United States and from the northeastern United States to southern and western parts of the country.
C | Languages |
English is the principal language for some 90 percent of the people of the United States and for about two-thirds of all Canadians. Spanish is spoken by the majority of Hispanic people in the United States, and French is the chief tongue for about one-quarter of the Canadian population. Many of the indigenous peoples and Inuit of the United States, Canada, and Greenland use their traditional languages. Spanish is the dominant language of Mexico, but several million Mexicans speak a Native American language.
D | Religion |
Christianity is the major religion of North America. The great majority of Mexicans are Roman Catholics, and some 45 percent of Canadians and 26 percent of U.S. inhabitants profess Roman Catholicism. Some 28 percent of Canada's people are Protestants and 8 percent are Anglicans. In the United States, Protestants make up 58 percent of the population. Canada and the United States also have substantial communities of Jews and Eastern Orthodox Christians.
E | Cultural Activity |
Cultural life in the United States and Canada is highly developed and diversified, with the mass media (radio, television, motion pictures, and newspapers) playing an important role. Almost all North American cities support theatrical organizations and art museums, and musical groups are widespread. Traditional cultural patterns are more evident in the rural areas of Mexico, but its cities have a variety of modern cultural institutions.
F | Hemispheric Developments |
A second important development in the history of the continent in the 19th and especially in the 20th century was the participation of the North American nations in the movement manifest throughout the Western Hemisphere for economic cooperation, for the attainment of peace and mutual understanding, and for solidarity against potential aggressors. In this movement the United States played a leading part, starting in 1823 with the Monroe Doctrine—the proclamation of President James Monroe that the United States would not permit European control of territories in the Americas beyond that existing at the time.
The only serious intracontinental conflict was the so-called Mexican War (1846-1848) between the United States and Mexico. During the 20th century a tendency toward mutual friendship developed among the nations of the Western Hemisphere, given form in 1910 with the establishment of the Pan-American Union. Almost all the nations of the Western Hemisphere either declared war on or broke diplomatic relations with the Central Powers in World War I (1914-1918) and with the Axis Powers in World War II (1939-1945).
One of the most important demonstrations of hemispheric solidarity was the Inter-American Defense Conference of 1947, which promulgated the Inter-American Treaty of Reciprocal Assistance—the Rio Treaty—which was signed by the United States, Mexico, and 17 Central and South American nations. The treaty provides for settlement of disagreements between nations of the Western Hemisphere, as well as for joint defense against aggression on the region extending from the Bering Sea to the South Pole. In 1948 the Organization of American States (OAS) was formed to implement the Rio Treaty and to serve as a collective security system.
Hemispheric cooperation was temporarily furthered by the Alliance for Progress, which was established in 1961. The alliance, which was accepted by the United States and 19 Latin American nations at Punta del Este, Uruguay, consisted of a ten-year development plan to raise the economic and social levels of the area and to strengthen its democratic institutions. After the original ten-year period, however, the alliance showed mixed results, and it gradually ceased to function.
The existence after 1959 of a Communist government in Cuba tended to complicate hemispheric activities. In 1962, at Punta del Este, the OAS voted to exclude Cuba from participation in the Inter-American system because of that nation's alignment with the countries of the Communist bloc.
The relations between the United States and Canada have been particularly friendly and cooperative since the War of 1812. No military installations aimed at defense against each other have existed since that time on the entire border between the two nations. The United States and Canada collaborated closely in the fight against the Axis Powers during World War II. In the postwar period, usually referred to as the era of the Cold War, the Canadian and American governments initiated plans for joint defense against possible aggression from the Soviet Union across the Arctic regions.
Mexico's serious internal strife from 1910 to 1920 and its nationalization of U.S. oil companies in 1938 plagued relations between the two nations during the first half of the 20th century. More recently, however, their relationship has been more friendly, as evidenced by the signing of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), which encouraged trade among the United States, Mexico, and Canada.
Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2008. © 1993-2007 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Labels: eco-history, geotourism, KU GIS Day, outdoor recreation, watershed
Friday, October 10, 2008
DeSoto Riverfront Park Blues & BBQ
LJWorld.com / De Soto’s Blues and BBQ to involve Lawrence artists
Oct 10, 2008 ... The park was built on the Kansas River just west of De Soto’s historic core.
... Saturday at De Soto blues fest October 9, 2008
... http://www2.ljworld.com/news/2008/oct/10/de_sotos_blues_and_bbq_involve_lawrence_artists
Labels: geotourism, national heritage trail, OCTA-Trails Marker, outdoor recreation, watershed
Thursday, July 24, 2008
Port of Shawnee River Recreation Area
TOPO! GPS Data Format Deg NAD83 ElevFeet Local-Time
PRAIRIEOAK,38.95926,-95.21909,806,07/24/2008,07:07:29,1414
PRSPCT,38.95791,-95.21796,835,07/24/2008,07:06:35,
DGCORECYCL,38.92815,-95.21728,839,07/24/2008,07:06:51,2730
HARPER,38.93331,-95.21538,850,07/24/2008,07:06:37,
LPRDNATCTR,38.93336,-95.21537,889,07/24/2008,07:07:15,
LFSTNTWO,38.94553,-95.21409,880,07/24/2008,07:07:14,
DGCOMSTGRD,38.94670,-95.21382,930,07/24/2008,07:06:51,
DGCOSTNBR2,38.94508,-95.21363,926,07/24/2008,07:06:51,
COLPRAIRIE,38.93293,-95.20968,870,07/24/2008,07:06:49,
PRAIRIEPRK,38.93293,-95.20967,870,07/24/2008,07:07:29,
KAWS-FLOWZ,39.01514,-95.20590,806,07/24/2008,07:07:09,E1600
OCTAX,38.90216,-95.20511,815,07/24/2008,07:06:53,
E1600N1300,38.92820,-95.20500,863,07/24/2008,07:06:52,
E1600N1250,38.92093,-95.20500,829,07/24/2008,07:06:52,
AUTORCYCLR,38.95011,-95.20452,889,07/24/2008,07:06:41,
E25STFRANK,38.93942,-95.19541,860,07/24/2008,07:06:53,1879
E1700,39.01223,-95.18774,866,07/24/2008,07:06:36,
LEVEESOEND,38.96604,-95.18640,814,07/24/2008,07:07:14,1700
E1360N,38.93806,-95.18622,824,07/24/2008,07:06:36,
COAL CREEK,38.91278,-95.18442,814,07/24/2008,07:06:49,
BLUEMOUNDW,38.90444,-95.18219,1052,07/24/2008,07:06:44,
BLUEMOUNDG,38.90444,-95.18219,1052,07/24/2008,07:06:44,1750
E1360N,38.93672,-95.17702,795,07/24/2008,07:06:36,
K10E1700RD,38.93863,-95.17619,825,07/24/2008,07:07:05,
MUD CREEK,38.98139,-95.16331,792,07/24/2008,07:07:20,
PENDLETONS,38.94966,-95.15717,798,07/24/2008,07:07:28,
WESTBJFORD,38.92489,-95.15041,813,07/24/2008,07:07:44,
SPRINGCRKS,38.92778,-95.13858,787,07/24/2008,07:07:35,
UPPERBJFRD,38.92694,-95.13790,793,07/24/2008,07:07:40,
WAKARUSACR,38.92611,-95.13608,800,07/24/2008,07:07:42,
LOWERBJFRD,38.93227,-95.13270,815,07/24/2008,07:07:14,
KENT CREEK,38.97083,-95.12164,803,07/24/2008,07:07:09,
LVCABLE215,38.96358,-95.09365,772,07/24/2008,07:07:16,
WAKARUSARV,38.95611,-95.08219,795,07/24/2008,07:07:43,
HMEQUARRYX,38.94626,-95.08171,848,07/24/2008,07:07:01,
KAWMEMORVR,38.96747,-95.07537,776,07/24/2008,07:07:08,
RAGLANDSPR,38.95680,-95.07514,797,07/24/2008,07:07:30,
E2300N1420,38.94605,-95.07489,863,07/24/2008,07:06:53,
HESPERKS,38.89861,-95.07469,921,07/24/2008,07:07:00,
E2375N1500,38.96077,-95.06121,819,07/24/2008,07:06:53,
KAWEK775FT,38.98242,-95.05629,774,07/24/2008,07:07:05,
SOKAWISLND,38.97628,-95.04645,777,07/24/2008,07:07:35,
EVESTR91ST,38.96606,-95.04600,847,07/24/2008,07:06:54,
CAPTAINCRK,38.97278,-95.03997,780,07/24/2008,07:06:46,
KAWEL771FT,38.97435,-95.03833,770,07/24/2008,07:07:07,
EVESTR87ST,38.97149,-95.03824,781,07/24/2008,07:06:54,
NINEMILEKS,39.00667,-95.02942,810,07/24/2008,07:07:22,
KAWEL77XFT,38.98315,-95.02516,770,07/24/2008,07:07:07,
KAWEL778FT,38.99762,-95.02500,777,07/24/2008,07:07:07,
STRANGRCRK,38.99972,-95.02275,766,07/24/2008,07:07:36,
KAWEL777FT,39.00050,-95.01961,777,07/24/2008,07:07:07,
SFTRAIL79E,38.98521,-95.01941,792,07/24/2008,07:07:34,
PRAIRIESTR,38.99272,-95.01936,789,07/24/2008,07:07:29,
KAWEL770FT,38.99996,-95.00841,769,07/24/2008,07:07:07,
KAWEK761FT,38.99767,-95.00003,761,07/24/2008,07:07:05,
KAWEL76XFT,38.99439,-94.99158,761,07/24/2008,07:07:07,
KAWEL76YFT,38.99180,-94.97975,761,07/24/2008,07:07:07,
LUNCHCACHE,38.98761,-94.97780,781,07/24/2008,07:07:15,
VFWPST6654,38.97613,-94.97687,864,07/24/2008,07:07:41,
KAWEL76ZFT,38.98789,-94.97505,761,07/24/2008,07:07:07,
KAWRDESOTO,38.98506,-94.97424,745,07/24/2008,07:07:08,
Labels: “Blog Action Day”, agritourism, eco-challenge, geotourism, outdoor recreation, Planet U, watershed
Saturday, April 12, 2008
Contours - National Geographic Maps Blog: REI Events
Preview ALL-WinWin StoryTech ... Eco-Futures Forum ... thinkLets:
Labels: distributed learning, geotourism, outdoor recreation, watershed
Nat Geo Mag Guardian of a Ghost World:
Unforgiving Land
The Fremont culture arose before A.D. 400 in the hardscrabble region that is now most of Utah and parts of nearby states. Despite the dry, unforgiving climate, they managed to cultivate corn, beans, and squash along waterways like Range Creek and the river from which they get their name.
-----------------
From the narrative above, I was able to find end-points for a transect between river confluences & generate an elevation profile ...
Fremont River to Range Creek Confluence, 28.63°TN, 71.16 miles
TOPO! GPS Data Format Deg NAD83 ElevFeet
FREMONTRVR,,38.40248,-110.69293,NA,FREMONT RIVER ... DIRTY DEVIL (UTAH BR_4)
RANGECREEK,39.30747,-110.05708,NA,04/12/2008,16:57:14,RANGE CREEK CONFLUENCE
Labels: distributed learning, eco-history, geotourism, social geocoding, social responsibility, watershed
Saturday, January 12, 2008
KSHS-KVHA GeoVenturing-LNTours(cc)
Kanza-OCTA Trails-n-Tales(cc)
Click title above for StoryTech Demo or here for Picasa2 pix ...
Uniontown Ferry Crossing: River Roots Research
Seeking inter-regional benchmarks for All-WinWin Eco-Futures: "TRCP.org" usda natural resource preservation protection fws.gov wetland habitat recreation trails

Labels: “Blog Action Day”, agritourism, eco-history, geotourism, national heritage trail, OCTA-Trails Marker, watershed
Sunday, September 30, 2007
SECO-PCMS Watershed Impact Zone
History
1970 - Glen R. Scott and David J. Varnes (of U.S. Geological Survey) General and Engineering Geology, United States Air Force Academy Site, Colorado: U.S. ...rock.geosociety.org/egd/Page/History.html
PCMSUSARMY,37.50065,-104.16397,5589,
http://coloradopreservation.org/
WRI 00-4113: Estimated flow-duration curves for selected ungaged sites in the Cimarron and Lower Arkansas River Basins in Kansas, by S.E. Studley
Central Region Scientific Investigations Maps
Articles in non-USGS Publications .... Limited Anniversary Edition of the Historic Trail Maps of Eastern Colorado and Northeastern New Mexico. ...cpg.cr.usgs.gov/pub/sim.html
Labels: distributed learning, eco-history, geotourism, national heritage trail, outdoor recreation, social responsibility, watershed
Saturday, September 29, 2007
2007 SFTA Symposium Eco-History (7929am)
Tracepoints captured by Garmin eTrex Legend GPS Unit & uploaded via TOPO! Version 4.2.7 ...
http://maps.nationalgeographic.com/category/Outdoor%20Recreation%20Mapping%20Software/?cid=3&tid=0
TOPO! GPS Data Format Deg NAD83 ElevFeet Local-Time
WILLOWSPGS,36.90823,-104.43891,6693,09/29/2007,08:58:39, Raton, NM (505 ) 445-9397
EAGLE NEST,36.55475,-105.26362,8203,08/29/2007,20:47:13,EAGLE NEST / THELMA
NINEMILENM,36.43059,-105.29056,8334,09/29/2007,08:58:26,NINEMILE CREEKNM
9MILECRK,36.44943,-105.34017,9167,09/29/2007,08:58:27,
WHEELERPK,36.55669,-105.41695,13160,09/29/2007,08:58:39,
TSJCSTUCTR,37.17203,-104.51468,6074,09/29/2007,08:58:36,
MESAEMAYA,37.01713,-103.88273,6280,09/29/2007,08:58:23,
BRANSON-CO,37.01569,-103.87848,NA,09/29/2007,08:58:03,
OLDBENTSFT,38.04380,-103.43156,4006,09/29/2007,08:58:28,
==========
CIMARRONOK,37.03335,-102.19213,3613,08/29/2007,20:17:11,DRY CIMARRON RIVER CUTOFF :: SFTA PANHANDLE
CIMARRONCO,37.25669,-102.15046,3785,08/29/2007,20:19:45,NORTH FORK DRY CIMARRON RIVER
LAJUNTACOW,38.08963,-102.61869,3634,09/29/2007,08:58:19,
NFCIMARRON,37.42058,-101.12101,2876,08/29/2007,20:20:25,NORTH FORK CIMARRON
1816CHOUTU,37.94394,-101.28423,3095,09/29/2007,08:57:59,
Also preview ... http://futurethought-mapxchange.blogspot.com/
Labels: distributed learning, eco-history, geotourism, national heritage trail, watershed
Sunday, July 29, 2007
EcoTrekUSA Interdependence mapXchange (7729am)

The New Math Of Global Warming
Commentary: A descriptive slideshow by Craig Damrauer
showing the equations for the new math of global warming.
Look out across the stark and barren landscape stretching out before you. Although seemingly inhospitable, Hawaiian settlements thrived here for many years.
Labels: agritourism, distributed learning, eco-challenge, eco-history, geotourism, national heritage trail, outdoor recreation, watershed
Friday, July 27, 2007
Port of Shawnee :: River Recreation Area
Mapping MentorshipART Muses via Pathfinder Passports(cc)
Embrace "Four Freedom's" natural heritage adVenturing (FFnha) ...
1830 to 1929 Kaw River Roots: "Waters to the Sea"
Dislocation Impacts: Indian Territory Treaties
... at our mythical Kaw Valley "Port of Shawnee" ...
"Rivers are both byways and barriers.
To understand our history, F1RST understand rivers."
Experience Freedom's Frontier via
National Geographic's Sustainable Destinations ... NPS.gov TAPR
L4R25gKaw-River-Roots_Nine-Mile-Creek_GeoVenturing-LNT_7725pm.JPG
TOPO! GPS Data Format Deg NAD83 ElevFeet Local-Time
NINEMILENM,36.43059,-105.29056,8334,07/26/2007,08:00:55,
NINEMILE CREEK :: NE-NEWMEXICO (Cimarron Watershed Alliance)
NINEMILEKV,39.00667,-95.02942,833,07/26/2007,08:00:54,
NINEMILE CREEK :: KAW VALLEY (KVHA-StreamLink)
-------------------------------------
NINEMILELV,39.26278,-94.87664,791,07/26/2007,08:00:55,
NINEMILE CREEK :: LVCO-KS (Port of Leavenworth Authority)
NINEMILEHC,44.80053,-93.29022,692,07/26/2007,08:00:54,
NINEMILE CREEK :: METRO-MN (9-Mile Creek MWA)

Labels: distributed learning, eco-challenge, geotourism, watershed
Sunday, March 18, 2007
Great Plains Bison Roaming Rangeland
... to join us in Wabaunsee County on Saturday, June 16 to enjoy the Kansas City Symphony performing for Second Annual Symphony in the Flint Hills 2007. ...www.symphonyintheflinthills.org/
Page Content Matches: 10
Prairie Passage Eco-Futures Forum (EFF) ...Page name match:
Prairie Passage Eco-Futures Forum (EFF)...
ACCTTS-LLC ... Moved to NW-Johnson County (Monticello Township
aka Prairie Passage in Kansas)...
Campus Futures ...After my KACEE-enabled Prairie Passage 2004
"Eco-Futurist" audition in ...
Eco-Futures Forum ...**Return to:** [Prairie Passage Eco-Futures Forum (EFF)] ...
ElderTreks ...!!
[http://geoventuring-lnt.blogspot.com/2005/11/benchmarking-prairie-passage-us...
HyperPort ...!!!
[http://geoventuring-lnt.blogspot.com/2005/10/exploring-kaw-valley-prairie...
Kan-Ed ...!!! **Return to** [ACCTTS-LLC]: [Prairie Passage Eco-Futures Forum (EFF)] ...
Kaw Valley Heritage Trails ...**Return to:** [Prairie Passage Eco-Futures Forum (EFF)] ...
Modern Social Change Theories ...!!! Prairie passages === ...
Pathfinder ...So, which prairie passage Pathfinders influenced
Bison returned to Colorado homeland
![]() Reuters Photo Wild bison bulls inspect the range shortly after being returned to the Colorado prairie from Montana ... |
Labels: agritourism, eco-challenge, eco-history, geotourism, watershed