57 results on '"David Huddart"'
Search Results
2. Adventure Tourism: Environmental Impacts and Management
- Author
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David Huddart, Tim Stott
- Published
- 2019
3. Outdoor Recreation: Environmental Impacts and Management
- Author
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David Huddart, Tim Stott
- Published
- 2019
4. Earth Environments
- Author
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David Huddart, Tim A. Stott
- Published
- 2019
5. Australian landscape memoir as conservationist vehicle: Winton, Tredinnick, Greer
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David Huddart and Graham Huggan
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,Subjectivity ,geography ,White (horse) ,Plateau ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Memoir ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Art history ,Art ,Environmental Science (miscellaneous) ,media_common - Abstract
In this essay, we propose to study three recent Australian landscape memoirs – Tim Winton’s Island Home (2015), Mark Tredinnick’s The Blue Plateau (2009) and Germaine Greer’s White Beech (2013) – all of which demonstrate the capacity of landscapes to act as perceptual conduits for the fundamental tension between world and self. Our main contention is that landscape memoir acts as a pre-eminent vehicle for this tension, which is captured across different times and spaces and among multiple, intricately co-constituted life-worlds. Landscape memoir, in this and other ways, functions as both a multi-sensory phenomenological instrument for the recording of physical and emotional engagement with landscape and a distinct, episodically organised mode of life writing that seeks to understand the fractured nature of individual selfhood in the context of a more-than-human world. The essay also looks at the capacity of memoirs of this kind to operate as vehicles for conservationist thinking and action. In each of our three main cases, landscape mediates between an insecure self and a world or worlds that are portrayed as being threatened, although this is not enough in itself to establish a basis for the three works as ‘conservationist’ texts. However, all three can be seen as individual enquiries into different kinds of conservation that use the techniques and characteristics of landscape memoir to reflect on the material possibilities of personal and collective recovery (Winton) and ecological restoration (Greer); or, over and against these, to mark the elegiac registration of irretrievable loss (Tredinnick).
- Published
- 2020
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6. Remote translators
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David Huddart
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Value (ethics) ,Cultural translation ,Aesthetics ,Scripting language ,Foregrounding ,Narrative ,Performative utterance ,Sociology ,Privileged access ,computer.software_genre ,computer ,Life writing - Abstract
Different spaces of questions (for example, concerning what is good to remember) interrelate – and life writing gives us privileged access to this ethical interrelation. This chapter examines life writing by Edward G. Seidensticker and Donald Richie, each associated with translating Japan. What links these works is not only the writers’ personal connections, but an exploration of the value of translation in the writing of cultural scripts. Translation refers to broader processes of cultural translation, but also to literal translations, in particular for Seidensticker The Tale of Genji. Both Seidensticker and Richie write about translation between Orient and Occident, foregrounding cultural scripting as performative. Each probes the limits of spaces of questions, and also of opposing cultural scripts. Are their narratives more evidence of familiar stereotypes? In both, the relational quality of life writing undermines any effort to shore up ontological and epistemological distinctions, as this chapter explores.
- Published
- 2021
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7. Hybridity
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David Huddart
- Abstract
Hybridity captures various ways in which identities are characterized by complexity or mixed-ness rather than simplicity or purity. It is a term that functions as a description of how things simply are, but it frequently appears to take on the characteristics of a prescription. It is not only that identities on various scales are hybrid, but also that they ought to be hybrid, or should become more hybrid. This prescriptive sense prompts reflection on the processes that drive mixed identities, shifting attention away from a static hybridity toward a dynamic and unending hybridization. The idea’s use in many different disciplinary formations typically implies that, while all identities are minimally hybrid, specific historical shifts have exaggerated and accelerated hybridity. Those shifts are associated with European colonialism, the Atlantic slave trade, neocolonial echoes, globalization, and the rise of the cyborg. Such associations raise the question of resistance to the prescriptive recommendation of hybridity to the extent that hybrid cultures are so frequently an outcome of violent domination. Formerly colonized cultures strive to re-establish more fundamental identities, casting the hybridizing colonial period as a brief if damaging and disruptive interlude. Resistance is also found in former imperial centers, with multiculturalism perceived as a hybridizing threat to the core integrity of a melancholic post-imperialism. And commentators continue to warn that automation and related AI will make unexpectedly diverse jobs obsolete in the very near future, a hybrid cyborg future that occasionally begins to feel more machine than human. Ultimately, it may seem that hybridity is opposed to various forms of indigeneity, purity, or in the most general case, humanity in general. However, such oppositions would be misleading, principally because hybridity as a cultural fact and as a concept implies nothing of necessity. Each context demands specific attention to the ways it is hybrid, the processes of hybridization, and the stabilities that follow.
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- 2020
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8. Bearing the future: Peter Carey’s Australia-to-come
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David Huddart
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,History ,Literature and Literary Theory ,Visual Arts and Performing Arts ,05 social sciences ,Wish ,0507 social and economic geography ,06 humanities and the arts ,060202 literary studies ,Bearing (navigation) ,050701 cultural studies ,Philosophy ,0602 languages and literature ,Classics - Abstract
I wish to acquaint you with some of the occurrences of the present past and future.Ned Kelly.1Peter Carey’s True History of the Kelly Gang clearly addresses occurrences of the past, in its return t...
- Published
- 2018
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9. Five Younger Dryas black mats in Mexico and their stratigraphic and paleoenvironmental context
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David Huddart, Gabriela Domínguez-Vázquez, Allen West, James L. Bischoff, Isabel Israde-Alcántara, and Silvia Gonzalez
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GB ,010506 paleontology ,geography ,GE ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Pleistocene ,Authigenic ,Aquatic Science ,Sedimentary basin ,CC ,01 natural sciences ,Sedimentary depositional environment ,Paleontology ,Sedimentary rock ,Younger Dryas ,Sedimentology ,Geology ,Holocene ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes - Abstract
The Younger Dryas interval (YD) was a period of widespread, abrupt climate change that occurred between 12,900 and 11,700 cal yr BP (10,900–10,000 14 C BP). Many sites in the Northern Hemisphere preserve a sedimentary record across the onset of the YD interval, including sites investigated in sedimentary basins located in central Mexico (Chapala, Cuitzeo, Acambay), the Basin of Mexico (Tocuila), and northern Mexico (El Cedral). Deposits consist of lacustrine or marginal lake sediments that were deposited during the Pleistocene and the Holocene. At the Tocuila and Acambay sites, Pleistocene fossil vertebrate assemblages, mainly mammoths (Mammuthus columbi), are found in association with a distinctive organic layer, sometimes called the black mat that formed during the YD. At the Chapala, Cuitzeo, Acambay, and Tocuila sites the black mats contain a suite of distinctive microscopic and mineralogical signatures and are accompanied by a sharp change in the depositional environments as supported by diatom and pollen studies reported here. The signatures include magnetic, Fe-rich microspherules, silica melted droplets with aerodynamic shapes (tektites), large amounts of charcoal, and sometimes nanodiamonds (Cuitzeo), all of which were deposited at the onset of the YD. The geochemistry of the microspherules indicates that they are not anthropogenic, authigenic or of cosmic or volcanic origin, and instead, were produced by melting and quenching of terrestrial sediments. Here, we present the stratigraphy at five field sites, the analyses of magnetic microspherules, including major element composition and scanning electron microscopy images. All of these materials are associated with charcoal and soot, which are distinctive stratigraphic markers for the YD layer at several sites in Mexico. © 2017 Springer Science+Business Media B.V.
- Published
- 2017
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10. Writing from the Outside? Post-1997 Expatriate Writing in Hong Kong
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Grant Hamilton and David Huddart
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Cultural Studies ,Literature and Literary Theory ,Expatriate ,Gender studies ,Sociology - Published
- 2017
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11. Adventure Tourism in Alaska
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David Huddart and Tim Stott
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Fishery ,Geography ,Arctic ,Harbour ,Wildlife ,Trampling ,Recreation ,computer ,Tundra ,Tourism ,Invasive species ,computer.programming_language - Abstract
Adventure tourism numbers are estimated for Alaska and the impacts on wildlife are considered in detail. This wildlife includes: black and brown bears, bear-viewing tourism and its management approaches; the impacts on Dall sheep; the effects of winter recreation on ungulates, including mountain caribou; the recreational impacts on bird populations, including bald eagles, black oystercatchers and marbled murrelets; and whale-watching and harbour seal impacts. The effects of recreation caused by camping, hiking trampling pressure on tundra, the invasive plant spread along trails and the development of informal trails in Arctic wildlife refuges are considered. The impacts of off-road vehicles on tundra, helicopter-supported recreation impacts and the effects of waste produced by climbers on Mount McKinley are evaluated. Finally, the effects of recreational fishing and some impacts on native human populations are discussed.
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- 2019
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12. Scotland
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David Huddart and Tim Stott
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- 2019
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13. What Is Adventure Tourism?
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Tim Stott and David Huddart
- Subjects
Geography ,Ecotourism ,Wildlife tourism ,Physical activity ,Environmental ethics ,Adventure tourism ,Adventure ,Tourism - Abstract
This chapter considers a definition of adventure tourism that includes physical activity, the natural environment and cultural immersion. Both hard and soft adventure can be important. The trends and numbers involved in this tourism area are discussed, including the growth in demand. Other types of often related niche tourism types are considered and defined, such as ecotourism, wildlife tourism, sustainable and responsible tourism.
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- 2019
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14. The Arctic Islands: Svalbard and Iceland
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Tim Stott and David Huddart
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Fishery ,Geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,biology ,Whale ,biology.animal ,Cruise ,Glacier ,Vegetation ,Trampling ,Recreation ,Tundra ,Tourism - Abstract
The Arctic region is defined, and the growth of tourist numbers and cruise tourists documented for Svalbard. The environmental impacts caused by trampling pressure on the fragile Svalbard tundra vegetation are outlined and the potential for the introduction of non-native plants is discussed. The environmental impacts on reindeer, walrus and various bird species are outlined, as are the snowmobile impacts on several species. The impact on historical sites and cultural remains is studied, and examples of the management of specific sites are given. The broader management approaches to the management of outdoor recreation in Svalbard is discussed. In Iceland the tremendous tourist growth since 2000 is discussed and the types of adventure tourism are documented, along with their environmental impacts, such as horse-based tourism; hiking and off-road vehicles. There is a detailed discussion of the introduction of non-native plants. The impacts of glacier and volcanic tourism, diving and snorkelling, whale and seal-watching are documented. The overall management of outdoor recreation impacts is discussed and suggestions are made.
- Published
- 2019
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15. Adventure Tourism in the Himalayas
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David Huddart and Tim Stott
- Subjects
Geography ,Mountaineering ,Recreational fishing ,Adventure tourism ,Environmental planning ,Cultural tourism ,Human waste ,Tourism ,Ethical code - Abstract
The types of adventure tourism in the Himalayas are discussed and the numbers taking part estimated. The development of mountaineering and trekking is outlined and examples of the growth of river activities discussed. Religious and cultural tourism is the most important category, but it is debatable if this is adventure tourism. The impact of the 2015 earthquakes on Nepalese tourism is discussed and the environmental impacts related to adventure tourism are detailed, such as trail erosion, the introduction of non-native plants, rubbish disposal issues, the disposal of human waste, deteriorating water quality, the impacts of recreational fishing and ski developments. Ways of counteracting impacts are outlined and attempts to manage tourism are discussed, such as the banning of tourism, the development of Eco Development Committees and the Mountain Shepherds Initiative in Nanda Devi Reserve, the Khanchendzonga Conservation Committee, Bhutan’s tourism policy, the Annapurna Conservation Project and the development of codes of conduct, ethical codes and minimum-impact codes.
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- 2019
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16. Adventure Tourism in the Canadian Arctic
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Tim Stott and David Huddart
- Subjects
Craft ,Fishery ,Geography ,biology ,Arctic ,Cruise ,Beluga ,Wildlife ,Narwhal ,biology.organism_classification ,Tundra ,Tourism - Abstract
The Canadian Arctic is defined and described and the numbers of tourists for the various regions estimated. The impact of adventure tourism on wildlife is documented, such as polar bear hunting and polar bear viewing, and the management approaches to conserve this iconic species are outlined; the possible spread of Giardia by tourists is discussed; and the impact of tourism on marine mammals and their management is described for beluga, narwhal and seals. There are impacts on birds too and on terrestrial vegetation in the tundra. Examples of aboriginal tourism are documented, including the development of the world-class Carcross mountain bike trails. Pleasure craft and cruise tourism have impacts, and the management approaches to minimise these are discussed. Finally the maintenance of the rich and diverse archaeological and historical sites in the face of tourist impacts is discussed.
- Published
- 2019
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17. The Andes
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David Huddart and Tim Stott
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- 2019
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18. Australia and New Zealand
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David Huddart and Tim Stott
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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19. Adventure Tourism in the Russian Arctic
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David Huddart and Tim Stott
- Subjects
geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Economy ,Arctic ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Archipelago ,Bureaucracy ,Adventure tourism ,Tourism ,media_common - Abstract
The areas of interest for adventure tourism are outlined and the number of tourists estimated. Tourism to Franz Josef Archipelago and Novaya Zemyla is described, and the problems related to such tourism development are outlined. These problems include bureaucracy and entry permits, remoteness and logistics, expense, lack of qualified personnel and of research and the lack of shipping infrastructure.
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- 2019
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20. East Africa
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David Huddart and Tim Stott
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- 2019
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21. Climate Change and Adventure Tourism
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David Huddart and Tim Stott
- Subjects
geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Greenhouse gas ,Ice age ,Environmental science ,Climate change ,Glacier ,Glacial period ,Physical geography ,Ice sheet ,Arctic ice pack ,Sea level - Abstract
By studying many different proxy data sources from places around the world, scientists have found evidence of global-scale climate change, from ice ages or glacial periods, when huge ice sheets covered most of Earth, to such as the present, when ice is largely confined to the polar and high mountain regions. According to the Fifth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (2014), warming of the climate system is unequivocal. This is now evident from observations of increases in global average air and ocean temperatures that anthropogenically produced greenhouse gases (mainly carbon dioxide, CO2) are contributing to the present warming of about 1.1 °C that has taken place since the late nineteenth century. Rising sea level is consistent with warming. Global average sea level has risen since 1961 at an average rate of 1.8 (1.3–2.3) mm per year, and since 1993 at 3.1 (2.4–3.8) mm per year, with thermal expansion, melting glaciers and ice caps, and the polar ice sheets contributing. Further warming will continue if emissions of greenhouse gases continue. The global surface temperature increase by the end of the twenty-first century is likely to exceed 1.5 °C relative to the 1850–1900 period for most scenarios and is likely to exceed 2.0 °C for many scenarios. The global water cycle will change, with increases in disparity between wet and dry regions, as well as wet and dry seasons, with some regional exceptions. The oceans will continue to warm, with heat extending to the deep ocean, affecting circulation patterns. Decreases are very likely in Arctic sea ice cover, northern hemisphere spring snow cover and global glacier volume. Global mean sea level will continue to rise at a rate very likely to exceed the rate of the past four decades. Changes in climate will cause an increase in the rate of CO2 production. Increased uptake by the oceans will increase the acidification of the oceans. Future surface temperatures will be largely determined by cumulative CO2, which means climate change will continue even if CO2 emissions are stopped.
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- 2019
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22. Recreational Scuba Diving and Snorkelling
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David Huddart
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Fishery ,Geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Coral reef ,Underwater ,Trampling ,Reef ,Recreation ,Kelp forest ,Artificial reefs ,Scuba diving - Abstract
In this chapter, recreation diving is defined, and the numbers involved and impacts discussed. However, it is difficult to quantify the impact of any one of many stressors on coral reefs independently of the others. There is often a lack of scientific understanding of the interrelationships which limits the success of efforts to effectively create policy and regulations preventing reef decline. The impacts include direct trampling by reef walking, from the effects of pontoons (installation, anchor damage, fish feeding), direct impacts from diver behaviour including sediments raised, the effects on the corals (including effects of sunscreens), impacts on fish communities and kelp forests. The ways of managing activities to reduce the impacts are discussed, including reducing use levels, modifying diver behaviour, establishing underwater diving and sculpture trails, artificial reefs, fee charging changes, and diver involvement in conservation projects.
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- 2019
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23. Gorge Walking, Canyoneering, or Canyoning
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David Huddart
- Subjects
Flora ,Geography ,Educational method ,Ecology ,Ecology (disciplines) ,Approaches of management - Abstract
Gorge walking, canyoneering, and canyoning use similar techniques and are undertaken by a relatively small number of participants. The impacts and management approaches from three case studies are illustrated. In the UK there is preserved a rare, specialised but diverse flora where the ecology can suffer types of impact and floral loss. Controlling impacts are suggested, like sacrificial gorges, gorge rotation, Adopt-a-Gorge schemes, and educational methods.
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- 2019
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24. Outdoor Recreation
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David Huddart and Tim Stott
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- 2019
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25. Horseback Riding
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David Huddart
- Published
- 2019
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26. Recreational Climbing and Scrambling
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David Huddart
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Fishery ,Geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Climbing ,Footpath ,Endangered species ,Cliff ,Erosion ,Biota ,Vegetation ,Recreation - Abstract
In this chapter, the types of climbing are defined and numbers involved are estimated. The effects of traditional summer climbing on cliff vegetation and other biota, like gastropods, are evaluated. This includes “gardening,” footpath erosion up to the crags, at the tops, and a decrease in rare and endangered species and tree damage from abseiling and belaying. The effects of cliff micro-topography and climbers’ preferences are discussed with regard to the vegetation distribution and the fact that not all effects are negative. The impacts on bird populations are evaluated, and the damage to the rock by ropes, chalk, protection, and the creation of rock polish is discussed. Other environmental effects from bouldering, winter, and mixed climbing are evaluated. The management to counteract these impacts such as management plans, memorandums of understanding, liaison groups, closures, seasonal restrictions, star systems in guides, permits, and outreach and education, including codes of conduct, are discussed and evaluated.
- Published
- 2019
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27. Introduction to Outdoor Recreation and Recreation Ecology
- Author
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David Huddart
- Subjects
InformationSystems_INFORMATIONINTERFACESANDPRESENTATION(e.g.,HCI) ,National park ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Visitor pattern ,Service (economics) ,Management system ,Recreation ecology ,Business ,Wilderness ,Environmental planning ,Visitor management ,Recreation ,media_common - Abstract
Here we define outdoor recreation, recreation impacts, and recreation ecology which are at the core of this book. The management of wilderness recreation in the USA is discussed as an example of how a recreation management system for protected areas operates, in particular how the National Park Service (NPS) has been controlled by legislative acts, policies, and guidelines. Strategies for defining visitor carrying capacity and monitoring visitor impacts are discussed along with site and visitor management techniques and strategies for educating the recreationists. The NPS originally employed the Visitor Experience and Resource Protection and decision-making framework for evaluating the visitor carrying capacity limits and currently uses the Visitor Use Management planning framework and decision-making framework which are described in this chapter.
- Published
- 2019
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28. Overall Summary
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David Huddart
- Published
- 2019
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29. Geocaching, Letterboxing, and Orienteering
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David Huddart
- Subjects
Environmental education ,Geography ,Disturbance (ecology) ,business.industry ,Wildlife ,Orienteering ,Environmental impact assessment ,Trampling ,business ,Environmental stewardship ,Popularity ,Environmental planning - Abstract
One of the opening statements by the New Forest Review Group (1988) that orienteering “by its very nature causes very considerable disturbance to wildlife and damage to flora over wide areas” has been shown to be unsupported. There is trampling of vegetation, but little evidence of disturbance of mammals and birds. It has also been shown that the reason for this is that orienteering, by its very nature, and by procedures of good practice, is a sport of low ecological impact. There also seem to be many wide-ranging educational benefits of orienteering, letterboxing, and geocaching and particularly the development of environmental stewardship, where the benefits outweigh the minor environmental impact. However, the growth in popularity of these activities needs careful monitoring and further research carried out.
- Published
- 2019
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30. Recreational Fishing
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David Huddart
- Published
- 2019
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31. Recreational Walking
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David Huddart
- Published
- 2019
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32. Caving
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David Huddart
- Published
- 2019
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33. Adventure Tourism : Environmental Impacts and Management
- Author
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David Huddart, Tim Stott, David Huddart, and Tim Stott
- Subjects
- Adventure travel--Environmental aspects, Tourism--Environmental aspects
- Abstract
This textbook presents a comprehensive overview of the environmental impacts of various types of adventure tourism and how these can be best managed. This volume follows on from the authors previous textbook – ‘Outdoor Recreation: Environmental Impacts and Management'and continues the aim of developing a deeper understanding of how tourist numbers impact the environment and to provide practical solutions to these problems. Combining their own first-hand experience and research with extensive literature review the authors'present several popular adventure tourism destinations from across the globe, including the Arctic, the Himalayas, Africa, Australia and Scotland as case studies. Chapters cover the particular challenges faced by each region: including impacts on animals and birds; the spread of invasive plant species and diseases; trail impacts on vegetation; impacts on geological, historical and archaeological sites and pollution and waste issues. A discussion and evaluation of the possible management actions for minimising these impacts and how outdoor recreation tourists can be regulated concludes each chapter. This practical and engaging textbook will be invaluable to students and scholars of adventure tourism and outdoor recreation as well as practitioners and managers working in the field.
- Published
- 2020
34. Earth Environments
- Author
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David Huddart, Tim A. Stott, David Huddart, and Tim A. Stott
- Subjects
- Earth sciences--Textbooks
- Abstract
Comprehensive coverage of the whole Earth system throughout its entire existence and beyond Complete with a new introduction by the authors, this updated edition helps provide an understanding of the past, present, and future processes that occur on and in our Earth—the fascinating, yet potentially lethal, set of atmospheric, surface, and internal processes that interact to produce our living environment. It introduces students to our planet's four key interdependent systems: the atmosphere, lithosphere, hydrosphere and biosphere, focusing on their key components, the interactions between them, and environmental change. The book also uses geological case studies throughout, in addition to the modern processes. Topics covered in the Second Edition of Earth Environments: Past, Present and Future include: an Earth systems model; components systems and processes; atmospheric systems; oceanography; surface and internal geological systems; biogeography; and aspects of Earth's record. The book also discusses the impact of climate and environmental change in a final chapter that draws together Earth's systems and their evolution, and looks ahead to potential future changes in Earth's environments. Updated to include all the major developments since 2008 Features research boxes containing summaries based on recent key journal articles Includes a companion web site containing multiple choice revision quizzes for students, PowerPoint slides for lecturers, useful links, and more Presents further reading for each topic so that students can build their knowledge base to underpin their own undergraduate research project/dissertation Offers additional case studies in each chapter for enhanced reader understanding Earth Environments: Past, Present and Future is an excellent text for undergraduates in geosciences, environmental science, physical geography, natural hazards, and ecology.
- Published
- 2019
35. El hombre temprano en América y sus implicaciones en el poblamiento de la cuenca de México
- Author
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Luis F. Bate, Alejandro Terrazas, José Concepción Jiménez López, Gloria Martínez Sosa, Gabriel Saucedo Arteaga, Robert Hedges, José Antonio Pompa y Padilla, David Huddart, Iván R. Muñoz Ovalle, Bernardo Arriaza, Luis Lozano Aguirre Beltrán, Alejandro Heredia Barbero, Miguel Ángel Peña Rico, Eduardo Villarreal Ramírez, José Ocotlán Flores, Eligio Orozco Mendoza, Lauro Bucio Galindo, Virginia Steen-McIntyre, Alan L. Bryan, Ruth Gruhn, Héctor M. Pucciarelli, Marina L. Sardi, Carlos Serrano Sánchez, Fernando Ramírez Rozzi, Ricardo Lascuráin Ledesma, Raúl Chávez Sánchez, José Luis Críales Cortés, Ximena Chávez Balderas, Adrián Martínez-Meza, Miguel Moreno Galeana, Álvaro Díaz-Badillo, María de Lourdes Muñoz Moreno, Lorena Valencia, María Villanueva, Nicholas P. Herrmann, Richard L. Jantz, Douglas W. Owsley, Cristóbal Gnecco, Eileen Jhonson, Óscar J. Polaco, Robson Bonnichsen, Michael Full, Marvin Reken, Silvia González, Luis Morett Alatorre, Joaquín Arroyo-Cabrales, Luis F. Bate, Alejandro Terrazas, José Concepción Jiménez López, Gloria Martínez Sosa, Gabriel Saucedo Arteaga, Robert Hedges, José Antonio Pompa y Padilla, David Huddart, Iván R. Muñoz Ovalle, Bernardo Arriaza, Luis Lozano Aguirre Beltrán, Alejandro Heredia Barbero, Miguel Ángel Peña Rico, Eduardo Villarreal Ramírez, José Ocotlán Flores, Eligio Orozco Mendoza, Lauro Bucio Galindo, Virginia Steen-McIntyre, Alan L. Bryan, Ruth Gruhn, Héctor M. Pucciarelli, Marina L. Sardi, Carlos Serrano Sánchez, Fernando Ramírez Rozzi, Ricardo Lascuráin Ledesma, Raúl Chávez Sánchez, José Luis Críales Cortés, Ximena Chávez Balderas, Adrián Martínez-Meza, Miguel Moreno Galeana, Álvaro Díaz-Badillo, María de Lourdes Muñoz Moreno, Lorena Valencia, María Villanueva, Nicholas P. Herrmann, Richard L. Jantz, Douglas W. Owsley, Cristóbal Gnecco, Eileen Jhonson, Óscar J. Polaco, Robson Bonnichsen, Michael Full, Marvin Reken, Silvia González, Luis Morett Alatorre, and Joaquín Arroyo-Cabrales
- Subjects
- Paleo-Indians--Mexico--Congresses, Indians of Mexico--Population, Paleo-Indians--America--Origin--Congresses, Paleo-Indians--America--Migrations--Congresses
- Abstract
Se presentan los resultados y avances en las investigaciones sobre el origen del hombre americano, su antigüedad, las migraciones, el medio ambiente en el que se desarrolló, la megafauna y sus pinturas rupestres, entre otros temas.
- Published
- 2019
36. Mia Couto, Contexts & Issues A Bibliographic Essay
- Author
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David Huddart and Grant Hamilton
- Published
- 2016
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37. ‘Ask Life’ Animism & the Metaphysical Detective
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David Huddart
- Subjects
Animism ,Ask price ,Philosophy ,Metaphysics ,Epistemology - Published
- 2016
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38. Introduction
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Grant Hamilton and David Huddart
- Published
- 2016
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39. Early-Mid Pleistocene environments in the Valsequillo Basin, Central Mexico: a reassessment
- Author
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Christopher H. Vane, David Huddart, Sarah E. Metcalfe, Melanie J. Leng, Jason R. Kirby, and Silvia Gonzalez
- Subjects
010506 paleontology ,Early Pleistocene ,Pleistocene ,Paleontology ,Pyroclastic rock ,Structural basin ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,01 natural sciences ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Megafauna ,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Period (geology) ,Tephra ,Geology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Volcanic ash - Abstract
The Valsequillo Basin in Central Mexico has been of interest due to the presence of megafauna and evidence for early human occupation, but research has been controversial. It has been suggested that extensive and deep lakes characterised the Early Pleistocene environment but sediment exposure is highly fragmentary and reliable dating has been difficult. Here we report, for the first time, Early Pleistocene palaeoenvironmental reconstructions using stable isotopes,diatoms, tephra and pollen. We studied several stratigraphic sections of mainly non-volcanic rocks, containing the 1.3 Ma Xalnene Ash as a stratigraphic marker. The isotope and other proxy data show that topographically low points in the basin were occupied by spring-fed, shallow water lakes during the Early – Mid Pleistocene, with a trend to drier conditions. The basin was a dynamic volcaniclastic environment during this period, with the production of the Toluquilla Volcano sequence and other rhyolitic-dacitic volcanic ashes interbedded with the lake sediments at the sections studied. There is no evidence from the sections for extensive and deep lakes before or after the Xalnene ash deposition. The presence of lakes in the basin during the Early Pleistocene would have made it attractive for megafauna.
- Published
- 2016
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40. Introduction: Survival of the Death Sentence
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David Huddart, David Coughlan, Christoforos Diakoulakis, and Elizabeth Wijaya
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,Philosophy ,Literature and Literary Theory ,Visual Arts and Performing Arts ,Head (linguistics) ,Aesthetics ,Survival of the fittest ,Psychology ,Sentence ,Mount - Abstract
[Love] must keep watch [veiller], it must mount sur-veillance over survival; it must keep watch to organize, work, and militate with a cool head, but it must never cease appealing to the chance of ...
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- 2016
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41. Metaphoricity in comparison
- Author
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David Huddart
- Subjects
Critical practice ,Literature and Literary Theory ,Comparative literature ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Postcolonialism (international relations) ,Epistemology ,Aesthetics ,Argument ,Critical reading ,Reading (process) ,Rhetoric ,Immediacy ,Sociology ,media_common - Abstract
Exploring metaphors and methods of critical reading, this article considers recent challenges to postcolonialism's critical practices. Juxtaposing models of close, distant, superficial, and slow reading, and drawing on the work of Said, Bhabha, Chow, Spivak, Damrosch, and Moretti, the article argues for the ongoing importance of postcolonial reading. In making this argument, the article puts postcolonialism alongside comparative literature, these practices responding to models of technological, worldly, and globalised connectedness that apparently supersede them. The critical objects made available by metaphors of reading suggest that the postcolonial tradition resists any rhetoric of transparency and immediacy, and insists on the slowness of reading. This slowness, an attention to the node as much as the network, remains vital to critical practice.
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- 2015
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42. An Interview with Mia Couto
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Grant Hamilton, David Brookshaw, and David Huddart
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media_common.quotation_subject ,Art ,media_common - Published
- 2016
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43. A Companion to Mia Couto
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Grant Hamilton, David Huddart, Grant Hamilton, and David Huddart
- Abstract
This new research in English on the work of the Mozambican writer Mia Couto provides a comprehensive introduction to the critical terrain of Couto's literary thought.Already well-established in the Lusophone world, Mia Couto is increasingly acknowledged as a major voice in World literature. Winner of the Camões Prize for Literature in 2013, the most prestigious literary prize honouring Lusophone writers, he was awarded the Neustadt International Prize for Literature in 2014, and in 2015 was shortlisted for the Man Booker International Prize. Yet, despite this high profile there are very few full-length critical studiesin English about his writing. Mia Couto is known for his imaginative re-working of Portuguese, making it distinctively Mozambican in character. This book brings together some of the key scholars of his work such as Phillip Rothwell, Luís Madureira, and his long-time English translator David Brookshaw. Contributors examine not only his early works, which were written in the context of the 16-year post-independence civil war in Mozambique, but alsothe wide span of Couto's contemporary writing as a novelist, short story writer, poet and essayist. There are contributions on his work in ecology, theatre and journalism, as well as on translation and Mozambican nationalist politics. Most importantly the contributors engage with the significance of Couto's writing to contemporary discussions of African literature, Lusophone studies and World literature. Grant Hamilton is Associate Professor of English literature at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. He is the editor of Reading Marechera (James Currey, 2013). David Huddart is Associate Professor of English literature at the Chinese University of Hong Kongand is author of Involuntary Associations: World Englishes and Postcolonial Studies (Liverpool University Press, 2014]
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- 2016
44. The Future of English in Asia : Perspectives on Language and Literature
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Michael O'Sullivan, David Huddart, Carmen Lee, Michael O'Sullivan, David Huddart, and Carmen Lee
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- English language--Study and teaching--Asia, English literature--Study and teaching--Asia, Second language acquisition--Asia, English language--Asia
- Abstract
This collection is unique in bringing together key thinkers on language and literature to discuss the future of English in Asia. Many of the contributors are themselves responsible for important sub-genres in English linguistics and literary studies and this collection gives them the opportunity to respond to each other directly. The different chapters also respond to different contemporary debates and emerging trends and discourses that are hugely important for the future of English language teaching in schools across Asia.This volume is also ground-breaking in bringing English literary studies and Applied English Linguistics together in the contemporary Asian context. The Future of English in Asia includes studies on the following subject areas:Cultural Translation in World Englishes, Multilingual Education, English Futures and the function of Literature, English Literary Studies in Japan, and English and Social Media in Asia. Well into this century, it appears that it is still very difficult to know what to expect when it comes to the future of English. The future of English will continue to be determined by complex local contexts. As it has in other parts of the world, the future of English in Asia will continue to rely on the proliferation of its transformations as much as its hegemonic status. This volume reflects the widespread acknowledgement that whatever future English has will inevitably be shaped by its fate in Asia.The collection will be a welcome resource for scholars and students of English linguistics, English literary studies, and topics related to the teaching of English in Asia.
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- 2016
45. The Future of English in Asia
- Author
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Michael O'Sullivan, Carmen Lee, and David Huddart
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Mainland China ,Modern English ,Cultural translation ,History ,World Englishes ,English literature ,language ,Media studies ,Literary criticism ,English studies ,On Language ,language.human_language - Abstract
1. Introduction 2. The Future of English in Asia Andy Kirkpatrick 3. The World's Other Languages How Native-Speaker Linguistic Traditions Can Make a Difference to Minority Languages Nicholas Ostler 4. 'We Must Make a People': Cultural Translation in World Englishes David Huddart 5. The Most Misunderstood Title in the World? Recontextualizing Roy Harris' inaugural lecture 'The worst English in the world?' Adrian Pable 6. Beyond 'Variety' and 'Community': A Conceptual Challenge for the Study of English in Asia Andrew Sewell 7. Constructing Categories in a Multilingual Hong Kong School Kara Fleming 8. Participating in English in Social Media: The Case of Chinese Users of the Photo-sharing Site Flickr Carmen Lee 9. English Futures: the Function of Literature Bill Ashcroft 10. The Medium is the Massage: Writing, Reading and the Work of Singaporean Literature in the Age of Social Media Eddie Tay 11. Literature Minus the Local: Assessing the Viability of a Taught Postgraduate Program in Literary Studies in Contemporary Hong Kong Stuart Christie 12. 'In Need of a Foreign Trademark': English Literature in Mainland China Graham Matthews 13. In Dialogue: Contesting the Politics of Globalization in Hong Kong Literature in English Michael Tsang 14. Trilingual Education in Inner Mongolia-Signposts for the future of English in Asia? Bob Adamson and Yi Yayuan 15. Reppraising Anglophone Literature for Japanese Students in a Globalized Society: Developing a Resilient Life Akiyoshi Suzuki 16. Reconfiguring English Literary Studies in the Japanese Academy Myles Chilton 17. English Literature Education in Hong Kong, Mainland China, and Japan: Student reception, utility, and its place in a moral education Michael O'Sullivan 18. Tieng Anh: Learning English: From Inertia to Hegemony and Deliverance Susan D'Aloia
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- 2015
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46. Paleoindian sites from the Basin of Mexico: Evidence from stratigraphy, tephrochronology and dating
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David Huddart, Gabriela Domínguez-Vázquez, Nicholas J. Felstead, James L. Bischoff, Silvia Gonzalez, and Isabel Israde Alcántara
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GB ,GE ,biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Archaeology ,law.invention ,Paleontology ,Stratigraphy ,law ,Pumice ,Younger Dryas ,Radiocarbon dating ,Tephrochronology ,Tephra ,Geology ,Earth-Surface Processes ,Volcanic ash ,Mammoth - Abstract
We present new data on the stratigraphy, dating and tephrochonology at the most important Paleoindian sites in the Basin of Mexico. These include: a) Peñon Woman III, with the oldest directly radiocarbon dated human remains (10,755 ± 75 BP); b) Tlapacoya, with two human crania dated to just over 10 ka BP; c) Tocuila, an important mammoth site with incorporation of fossils and suggested bone tools within the Upper Toluca Pumice (UTP) lahar (volcanic mudflow). The Tocuila site also includes potential evidence for a layer associated with the Younger Dryas meteorite airburst, with charcoal, iron microspherules, micro-tektites (melted glass) and volcanic ash, dated to 10,800 ± 50 BP and d) the Santa Isabel Iztapan mammoths I and II with lithics of Scottsbluff, Lerma and Angostura types and obsidian prismatic blades but lacking the characteristic fluted Clovis type points normally associated with mammoth kills and butchering and dated after the Pumice with Andesite (PWA) layer between 14,500 BP and 10,900 BP, before the Younger Dryas interval. These results show that these lithic traditions in Central Mexico are older than in the Great Plains of USA. Several tephra markers are recognised in the sites that help to constrain the stratigraphy and dating of the archaeological sequences. However tephra reworking in marginal lake sites is present and has been carefully considered, especially for the PWA tephra.\ud \ud Keywords\ud Late Pleistocene; Mexico; Tephra; Dating; Mammoths; Paleoindians
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- 2015
47. Error and Innovation in Postcolonial Composition
- Author
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David Huddart
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Geography ,World Englishes ,Anthropology ,Social science ,Composition (language) - Published
- 2015
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48. Slow Reading: The Opacity Of World Literatures
- Author
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David Huddart
- Subjects
Literature ,History ,Opacity ,business.industry ,Reading (process) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,business ,media_common - Published
- 2014
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49. Declarations of Linguistic Independence: The Postcolonial Dictionary
- Author
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David Huddart
- Subjects
media_common.quotation_subject ,Sociology ,Linguistics ,Independence ,media_common - Published
- 2014
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50. Conclusion: English Remains, Englishes Remain
- Author
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David Huddart
- Published
- 2014
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