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1/25/2010 7:07:28 PM
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Title
Rivers Without Boundaries: Proceedings of the Second Biannual ARMS Symposium on River Planning and Management
Date
4/18/1994
Prepared By
American River Management Society
Floodplain - Doc Type
Educational/Technical/Reference Information
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<br />13 <br /> <br />Locations in the Mississippi Headwaters corridor are protected by the fact that land is owned by a public agency. <br />Other locations are designated as protected for scientific and natural study purposes by action of state and federal <br />government. The critical variable is the disturbance of the landscape. The rankings favor locations where <br />disturbance could result in lost opportunities to use the locality to build human knowledge. <br /> <br />1 = Disturbed areas, where the original vegetation and topography has been substantially altered; river <br />corridor has been altered by dam or diversion; water qnality monitoring is primary opportunity for <br />study; <br /> <br />2 = Shoreline vegetation and topography is about 50 percent disturbed; known natural and cultural sites <br />are protected by public land ownership; <br /> <br />3 = Shoreline vegetation and topography is about 50 percent disturbed; stretch features typical plant and <br />animal species; prehistoric and historic uses cited in literature at unrecorded locations; private land <br />ownership predominates; <br /> <br />4 = Shoreline vegetation and topography is not disturbed; unique plant and animal species represented; <br />development has a limited impact -- light residential, pipeline corridors; locations of cultural sites <br />known by literature or survey work; private land ownership <br /> <br />5 = Shoreline vegetation and topography not disturbed; stretch represents a transition zone between <br />typical and unique ecosystems; locations of cultural sites known by survey work; private land <br />ownership predominates; stretch is located near a community and has a high potential for development. <br /> <br />Recreational Values: This values assesses the river stretch's potential for recreational development. <br />Recreational uses are understood to range across a wide variety of uses. Some recreational uses require little <br />infrastruCture and do not have an intensive impact on the envirorunent. For example, canoeing or hiking fits this <br />low-infrastructure, low intensity use. Other uses, such as motor boating require more infrastructure, such as an <br />adequate access with associated parking, and have a more intensive impact on the river and may even create <br />conflicts with other users. The critical variables are the intensity of modification required to the natural landscape <br />to allow the use, the intensity of the impact on the river and the potential to cause conflict with other users. <br /> <br />1 = River readily accessible from land and from water; access points show a high degree of modilication <br />allows high impact uses, on the water and on the shorelands, that can result in user conflicts (indicated <br />by presence of developed parl<s and campgrounds; motor boating accesses and marinas); river generally <br />accessible to a variety of users at private and public locations. <br /> <br />2 = Landscape has been modified to allow uses of land and water, at fIXed accesses points, providing <br />access and camping; uses range from motor boating to canoeing in summer and snowmobiling to <br />hunting in the fall and winter; access points located Jess than 10 miles apart. <br /> <br />3 = Access points to river available, at road crossings and at defined access points, but recreational land <br />use is limited to water only access; uses conflicts can occur. <br /> <br />4 = Access points to river available, but greater than 10 miles apart. <br /> <br />5 = Little or no development for recreational use; access by water only at remote locations. <br /> <br />The Missi..inni Headwaters Gnide Book will be published in Fall 1994. MHB is now initiating a planning <br />activity where the inventory of values will be nsed to build management strategies for river protection. The <br />goals of this activity are twofold; <br /> <br />. To provide for a coordinated program of river protection and management, at the local level, that is <br />comprehensive and interdisciplinary, and <br /> <br />Rivers Without Boundaries 1994 <br />
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