The Peace Parks Foundation is an international, neutral body that coordinates the creation of "
Peace Parks" -- a more foundation friendly name for "Transfrontier Conservation Areas." Peace Parks are defined as "relatively large protected areas, which straddle international frontiers between two or more countries and cover large-scale natural systems encompassing one or more protected areas."
Executive Vice-Chairman Willem van Riet of South Africa, in San Diego, California, this month to receive the
Presidential Award from GIS software giant ESRI, is that Peace Parks remove the fences of international frontiers -- the "scars of history" -- to let elephants resume their natural migratory paths. An early success of this idea was
profiled in full and stunning color by the National Geographic in 2001.
posted by mmahaffie
on Aug 22, 2004 -
6 comments
Polar bears of Churchill, Manitoba. Wildlife photographer Ken Bereskin has a nice collection of polar bears
frolicking in the snow.
This itchy bear
is so frustrated, he's using the rippled ice of a frozen lake to
scratch himself. If you need a change of temperature, he also has
over 500 images
of wildlife from Uganda and Kenya, including
big
cats (a mother
cuddling
with
her cubs, a cheetah
chomping
down on a gazelle, and a young lioness
shredding
a skeleton to pieces),
great
apes, and
other wildlife (
the
lowly hyena eating the cheetah's leftovers, a black-headed heron
eating
a venomous boomslang snake, and a
scary-looking
vulture taking it all in from above). He also has a
smaller
collection of desert wildlife from the dunes of Etoshia National
Park in Namibia. (His real job is working for Apple, and he has a
Panther blog
that hasn't been updated in eons, but evidently that's not as much fun
as chasing after hungry carnivorous animals in the sweltering heat, or
risking frostbite in the snow).
posted by invisible ink
on May 6, 2004 -
5 comments