Release of: America's Geoheritage II: Identifying, Developing, and Preserving America's Natural Legacy

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The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine have released the proceedings of the workshop America's Geoheritage II: Identifying, Developing, and Preserving America's Natural Legacy.  This publication, released on September 22, is now freely available on the National Academies Press website (https://nap.edu/26316).  Additionally, it is linked on the workshop webpage, https://www.nationalacademies.org/our-work/americas-geoheritage-ii-a-workshop.

Full Description:
America is endowed with places that embody a rich geoheritage, from sites where indigenous people subsisted for millennia, to mines that furnished the raw materials that built U.S. industry, to mountain ranges and river gorges with unparalleled recreational opportunities, to field sites where students can truly understand a geological process, to places of aesthetic or spiritual value, and many more across all states and territories. In order to assess the status of geoheritage and the activities of its practitioners in the United States in light of social, political, and environmental changes over the past ten years, the National Academies of Sciences Engineering and Medicine convened a series of virtual webinars and a workshop. From September to December 2020, a Distinguished Speakers Webinar Program composed of eight webinars provided an overview of geoheritage initiatives, as well as focused presentations on geoheritage related to federal and state lands, cultural heritage, education, research, and economic development and geotourism. In January 2021, 101 land managers, state geologists, educators, researchers, and members and staff of professional societies and nongovernmental organizations participated in a virtual writing workshop to aggregate and organize community input on strategies and best practices in developing geoheritage sites across the United States. The participants were divided into focus groups that roughly aligned with the topics explored in the fall 2020 workshops. The groups worked synchronously and asynchronously over the course of a week, then presented their ideas in a plenary session. This publication summarizes the presentations and discussion of the webinars and workshop.


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David Mogk, Chair, U.S. National Committee for Geological Sciences

Ester Sztein, Assistant Director, Board on International Scientific Organizations, NASEM
James Manning, Senior Program Assistant, Board on International Scientific Organizations, NASEM