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FIELD & STREAM, America’s largest outdoor sports magazine, celebrates the outdoor experience with great stories, compelling photography, and sound advice while honoring the traditions hunters and fishermen have passed down for generations.
A layman's guide to identifying and understanding the marine life while scuba diving.
Discusses the various aspects of the sea--from the many moods of the sea to the many people who depend upon it for their livelihood.
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Kept up to date by a monthly publication called: United States. Tax Court. Reports.
This unauthorized biography plots the course of the two-decade career of the singer, songwriter, actor, raconteur, and elder statesman of the U.S. punk rock scene, who has transformed himself from a minor cult celebrity into a one-man multi-media movement. 10 photos.
To Do...Doing...Done!: A Creative Approach to Managing Projects and Effectively Finishing What Matters Mostfocuses on the skills required to manage any project without getting bogged down in conflicts or sidetracked by unexpected changes or developments.In this book are proven techniques for bringing any project to a successful and satisfying conclusion. The techniques provided inTo Do...Doing...Done!are based on Franklin Quest's highly successful Planning for Results seminar, which has boosted the productivity of thousands of employees in corporations across the country, as well as in Europe and Asia.
This book seeks to underscore the need for scientific approaches to first understanding and then managing tourist interactions with marine wildlife. It draws upon the work of leading natural and social scientists whose work serves the interests of sustainable wildlife-based marine tourism. Thus from within the natural science disciplines of marine biology, environmental science, behavioural ecology, conservation biology, and wildlife management come chapters that provide insights into the effects of human disturbance on marine wildlife, the impacts that tourists may have upon wild animals, and the management approaches to mitigating impacts that may in the long term be biologically significant. Equally from the social science disciplines of geography, sociology, management and social anthropology are drawn chapters that explore demand for marine wildlife experiences, the benefits that visitors derive from their experiences, ethical and legislative contexts, and management issues that arise when tourists interact with populations of wild animals in coastal and marine environments.