The creation and subsequent downsizing of Bears Ears National Monument has been one of the most publicized and politicized land management decisions within the state over the past decade. However, relatively little research has been conducted to determine if, and to what extent, the creation of the monument impacted outdoor recreation and recreation-related industries. Now, more than three years after the monument was created, there are sufficient data to take a retrospective look at the influence of the monument. The purpose of this research is to evaluate the influence of Bears Ears National Monument on outdoor recreation and its related industries in San Juan County, Utah.
These two presentations were made at meetings organized by Senator Robert Bennett of Utah to obtain input from interested parties regarding public lands management issues in southeastern Utah. The first presentation, made on April 22, 2010, was a review of archaeological research in western San Juan County, Utah, with some recommendations regarding site protection and public education needs. The second presentation, in May,26, 2010, reviewed the archaeological resources of the eastern part of San Juan County Utah and noted the potential for impacts from ongoing and planned economic development, particularly from fluid mineral production. Recommendations were made regarding some specific legislative proposals, as well as the need to recognize the public benefits of archaeological research, education, and cultural heritage preservation alongside economic development. ; Lipe, William D. (2010). Two Presentations Regarding Cultural Resource Management Issues on Public Lands in Southeastern Utah.
"In 2015, a flood of thick yellow sludge from a long-abandoned mine in Silverton, Colorado, made headlines as it flowed down the Animas River towards the Navajo Nation and the mighty Colorado River. Perhaps the most charismatic environmental disaster of our time, the Gold King Mine spill illustrates the devastating potential waiting in hundreds of abandoned mines throughout the Rocky Mountains. With disarming storytelling, award-winning journalist Jonathan P. Thompson unearths a litany of impacts wrought by a century and a half of mining, energy development, and fracking in southwestern Colorado. Amid these harsh realities, Thompson explores how a new generation is setting out to make amends"--Back cover
Datos históricos, cronológicos y biográficos de Juan de San Martín y Gómez. Nacido en Cervatos de la Cueza, Palencia, el 3 de febrero de 1728 y fallecido en Málaga, el 4 de diciembre de 1796. Fue militar español y gobernante colonial que hizo carrera en la región del Río de la Plata. Fue nombrado teniente de gobernador de Yapeyú el 13 de diciembre de 1774. ; Texto mecanografiado.
EN JUNIO, EL MUNICIPIO DE TELDE CELEBRA LAS FIESTAS PATRONALES EN HONOR A SAN JUAN BAUTISTA, QUE SE REALIZAN EN EL MARCO HISTÓRICO DE SAN JUAN. ; PROCESIÓN DE SAN JUAN BAUTISTA. LA IMAGEN ES PORTADA POR UN GRUPO DE FALANGISTAS. ; Copia digital. Madrid : Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte. Subdirección General de Coordinación Bibliotecaria, 2015
EL CUARTO SEÑOR, DE DERECHA A IZQUIERDA ES MIGUEL BENÍTEZ TORRES. ; RETRATO DE UN GRUPO DE MILITARES Y OTRAS FUERZAS POLÍTICAS REUNIDOS EN LA PLAZA DE SAN JUAN, EN TELDE. ; Copia digital. Madrid : Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte. Subdirección General de Coordinación Bibliotecaria, 2015
El Valle del Tulum, en la provincia de San Juan, Argentina, es un oasis en medio del desier-to. Sus 120.000 ha de concesiones para riego agrícola forman, sin duda, uno de los regadíos más antiguos del país y la región. Los primeros aprovechamientos hídricos para la agricultu-ra se remontan al siglo XII, luego expandidos por los españoles a partir de 1562. En 1818 se construye el primer canal con toma directa en el río San Juan, dando inicio a la creación de distritos de riego, que más tarde derivaron en los actuales Términos Municipales. La provin-cia se constituye en 1820 y ya en 1825 el gobierno crea la Policía de Aguas. Más tarde, en 1851, se sanciona el Reglamento de Irrigación y Agricultura, primer cuerpo legal del país, conjuntamente con la Inspección General del Agua, dando origen a la administración aún vigente del agua. Hoy en día, en este complejo agro-ecosistema viven 550.000 habitantes y es el corazón de la actividad agrícola, industrial y social de la provincia. En ese contexto, el agua ha sido eje de relaciones tanto cooperativas y asociativas como conflictivas, donde su provisión suficiente es fruto del inevitable trabajo colectivo y mancomunado de todos los actores e instituciones involucrados en cada momento. Domingo F. Sarmiento, gobernador de la provincia y presidente de la nación, sin duda una de las mentes más lúcidas que ha da-do la Argentina, alegaba en 1862 que "el agua es para San Juan lo que la sangre para el cuerpo humano, su principio vital". Por esta condición, desde siempre la temática del rega-dío ha sido parte de la vida de los sanjuaninos. Este trabajo busca acercar a los interesados un recorrido histórico hasta llegar a la institucionalidad actual que ayude a su vez a pensar el futuro. ; The Tulum Valley, in San Juan, is an oasis in the dessert. Its 120.000 ha of irrigation rights have allowed the creation of one of the oldest irrigated areas in Argentina and the region. First hydraulic works for irrigation started back in the XII century by indigenous people and were later expanded by the Spaniards since 1562. The first water intake from the San Juan River and main canal was built in 1818, beginning since then the creation of several irriga-tion districts which eventually became the current political counties. The province was con-stituted in 1820 and early in 1825 the government creates the provincial Water Police. Later in 1851, the Reglamento de Irrigación y Agricultura was sanctioned, together with the crea-tion of the Inspección General del Agua, being the first water statute in the country, and the milestone for the current water administration. Today, 550,000 people live in this complex agro-ecosystem, which is the core of the agricultural, industrial, and social activity of the province. In this context, water has been at the center of many cooperative and associative as well as conflictive relationships, where its sufficient provision is the result of the inevitable collective and united work of all stakeholders at any given time. Domingo F. Sarmiento, governor of the province and president of the Nation, one of the greatest men born in Argentina, alleged in 1862 that "water is for San Juan what blood is for the human body, its vital principle". For this reason, irrigation issues have been part of the sanjuaninos everyday life. By revisiting the historical framework, the goal of this work is bring insight to those inter-ested not only in it but also in thinking the future. ; EEA San Juan ; Fil: Gonzalez Aubone, Fernando. Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria (INTA). Estación Experimental Agropecuaria San Juan; Argentina ; Fil: Reggio, Lourdes. Programa de Servicios Agrícolas Provinciales; Argentina ; Fil: Graffigna, Luisa. Programa de Servicios Agrícolas Provinciales; Argentina