Geological Heritage and Biodiversity in Natural and Cultural Landscapes

Geological Heritage has very diverse elements, both for its intrinsic nature and for its social and scientific significance. These elements have a scientific dimension (stratigraphic, geomorphological, lithological, paleontological, etc.) and a landscape dimension, both with implications for territo...

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Year of Publication:2021
Language:English
Physical Description:1 electronic resource (226 p.)
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520 |a Geological Heritage has very diverse elements, both for its intrinsic nature and for its social and scientific significance. These elements have a scientific dimension (stratigraphic, geomorphological, lithological, paleontological, etc.) and a landscape dimension, both with implications for territorial management. In territorial management and planning, it is essential to carry out inventory and cataloging of places of natural and social interest to establish a comprehensive policy. The identification and valuation of the geological and biological heritage, and their interaction in the landscape should favor the conservation and preservation of this natural and historical heritage. Sustainable development implies rational use that prevents the degradation or loss of these unique environments of the natural environment as well as a dissemination and awareness of landscape resources for a better understanding and enjoyment, integrating activities of both environmental education and nature tourism.The diversity of a territory is the result of the complex and continuous interaction of the geological substrate (geotopical) and biological factors that model the existing ecological and evolutionary processes at the level of genes, species, ecosystems, and landscapes and that are expressed in a characteristic representation of organisms adapted to these factors. These vary according to the spatial dimensions and the temporal scales considered, in a wide range, that goes from the geological processes that involve millions of years and vast territories to the casuistic biotic, and anthropic events that can occur in an instant in any territorial sector. 
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650 7 |a Research & information: general  |2 bicssc 
653 |a quaternary landscape 
653 |a geomorphological analysis 
653 |a depositional-erosional terraces 
653 |a incision-displacement rates 
653 |a Tormes River 
653 |a landscape 
653 |a landscape quality 
653 |a landscape fragility, need of protection 
653 |a landscape diagnosis 
653 |a GIS 
653 |a environmental assessment 
653 |a petrified forest 
653 |a sustainable development 
653 |a geodiversity 
653 |a biodiversity 
653 |a Puyango 
653 |a geopark 
653 |a fluvial terraces 
653 |a chronology 
653 |a Yeltes river 
653 |a Duero basin (Spain) 
653 |a geomorphological map 
653 |a Appalachian landscape 
653 |a neotectonic 
653 |a drainage network 
653 |a superimposition-antecedence 
653 |a fungal indicators 
653 |a conservation 
653 |a dehesas 
653 |a MW Spain 
653 |a Corridor Designer 
653 |a MaxEnt 
653 |a species distribution models 
653 |a ecological corridors 
653 |a armed conflict 
653 |a Colombia 
653 |a conservation and development 
653 |a fertility 
653 |a human biodemography 
653 |a infant mortality 
653 |a local populations 
653 |a population structure 
653 |a protected areas 
653 |a socio-economic effects 
653 |a ecological niche dynamics 
653 |a reciprocal niche models 
653 |a biological invasions 
653 |a Batuecan lizard 
653 |a connectivity 
653 |a endangered species 
653 |a graph theory 
653 |a Iberolacerta martinezricai 
653 |a mountain lizard 
653 |a network analysis 
653 |a Ramsar Site 
653 |a types of wetlands 
653 |a priority habitats 
653 |a cultural values 
653 |a sensitivity 
653 |a vulnerability 
653 |a threatened species 
653 |a hydrophyte plants 
653 |a species’ rear edges 
653 |a climatic change 
653 |a CENFA 
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700 1 |a Agudo, José Ángel Sánchez  |4 edt 
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700 1 |a Agudo, José Ángel Sánchez  |4 oth 
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