Historical Landscape Restoration Using Google Technology in a Traditional Temple Area, Kanazawa, Japan

Author(s):  
Zhenjiang Shen ◽  
Mitsuhiko Kawakami ◽  
Zheyuang Chen ◽  
Linqian Peng
2005 ◽  
Vol 53 (3) ◽  
pp. 237-245 ◽  
Author(s):  
EDITH B. ALLEN ◽  
ROBERT D. COX ◽  
TRACY TENNANT ◽  
SHEILA N. KEE ◽  
DOUGLAS H. DEUTSCHMAN

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mariano García Plaza ◽  
Marisa Víctor Crespo ◽  
Jesús Ramé López

Multiscreen society bombards us with images about which we can not think, to this is added a technological development that is hast urned us as a issues – receivers of pictures / images in our daily lives. Thus arises a need to deepen the possibilities of emancipation that the current socio-historical landscape can have.“Educar la mirada” we are a group of professionals in education and audiovisual communication that pretend, through film- art and new audiovisual creation devices, to encourage literacy and audiovisual creation for life. We start from work with collectives whose artistic motive has no lucrative interest, such as the public school; hence our interest in non-productive subjects. This project arises from the work carried out by the Trabenco Educational Community ( Public School ) in relation to the environment that exists between childhood and the audiovisual media.Theories of reflection on audiovisual literacy and ways of doing creative people who have a clearer meaning for our approach are: F.P.R Bergala, work CineSinAutor, proposals for Medvedkin, language patterns Alxander and creative crystallizations by authors such as Trier, Rossellini, Rodari, Vigotsky or Svankmajer.This project aims at a careful attention to the audiovisual with the intention of giving it a use beyond stagnant paradigms, where the possibilities we seek are those that make effective the needs and purposes that are given by the collectives themselves.


Forests ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 245
Author(s):  
Nguyen Dang Cuong ◽  
Köhl Michael ◽  
Mues Volker

Forest landscape restoration is a widely accepted approach to sustainable forest management. In addition to revitalizing degraded sites, forest landscape restoration can increase the supply of sustainable timber and thereby reduce logging in natural forests. The current study presents a spatial land use optimization model and utilizes a linear programming algorithm that integrates timber production and timber processing chains to meet timber demand trade-offs and timber supply. The objective is to maximize yield and profit from forest plantations under volatile timber demands. The model was parameterized for a case study in Thai Nguyen Province, Vietnam, where most forest plantations grow Acacia mangium (A. mangium). Data were obtained from field surveys on tree growth, as well as from questionnaires to collect social-economic information and determine the timber demand of local wood processing mills. The integration of land use and wood utilization approaches reduces the amount of land needed to maintain a sustainable timber supply and simultaneously leads to higher yields and profits from forest plantations. This forest management solution combines economic and timber yield aspects and promotes measures focused on economic sustainability and land resource efficiency.


2014 ◽  
Vol 29 (4) ◽  
pp. 665-675 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bradley J. Cosentino ◽  
Robert L. Schooley ◽  
Brandon T. Bestelmeyer ◽  
Jeffrey F. Kelly ◽  
John M. Coffman

2016 ◽  
Vol 103 (11) ◽  
pp. 1869-1871 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robin L. Chazdon ◽  
Lars Laestadius

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