Wild and Scenic River Act
WILD AND SCENIC RIVER ACT
The federal government enacted protective legislation called the Wild and Scenic River Act (WSRA) in 1968 to preserve and protect wild and scenic rivers in America, including their immediate surrounding environment for the benefit of present and future generations. It was legislation to forbid all commercial development projects, along designated wild and scenic rivers, which might in any way affect the wilderness, the scenery, and the purely recreational use of the rivers. Some of the national Wild and Scenic Rivers include the Alagnak, Bluestone, Delaware, Donner and Blitzen, Great River, Missouri, Obed, and Rio. The Wild and Scenic Rivers are managed by different federal agencies, including the U.S. Forest Service, National Park Service, and the Fish and Wildlife Service. The designation of specific protected rivers near human communities has created the potential for significant conflict between resource and conservation management agencies and the commercial interests of local residents. Strategic efforts are made by managing federal agencies to incorporate local values with the planning and management of protected rivers to reduce conflict potential. According to the WSRA, a wild river is "free of impoundment's and generally inaccessible except by trail, with watershed or shorelines essentially primitive and waters unpolluted. These represent vestiges of primitive America."
See also: Environmentalism
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Edwin M. McMillan, 84, Nobel Co-Winner, Dies
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 9/9/1991; ; 700+ words
; ...work for the government, Dr. McMillan returned to Berkeley, where...accelerators of today possible. Dr. McMillan began his career at Berkeley...for nuclear arms limitations. Edwin Mattison McMillan was born Sept. 18, 1907, in...
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Winners of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry.
News Wire article from: United Press International; 10/8/2003; 700+ words
; ...Archer John Porter Martin, United Kingdom; Richard Laurence Millington Synge, United Kingdom. 1951 -- Edwin Mattison McMillan, United States; Glenn Theodore Seaborg, United States. 1950 -- Otto Paul Hermann Diels, Germany; Kurt Alder...
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Nobel Prize in Chemistry laureates.
News Wire article from: United Press International; 10/9/2002; 700+ words
; ...Archer John Porter Martin, United Kingdom; Richard Laurence Millington Synge, United Kingdom. 1951 -- Edwin Mattison McMillan, United States; Glenn Theodore Seaborg, United States. 1950 -- Otto Paul Hermann Diels, Germany; Kurt Alder...
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Nobel callings // The university's ranks yield 61 winners of the prestigious prize
Newspaper article from: Chicago Sun-Times; 10/6/1991; 700+ words
; ...Physics, 1965, with Richard P. Feynman and Sin-Itiro Tomonaga Glenn Theodore Seaborg, Chemistry, 1951, with Edwin Mattison McMillan Manhattan Project, 1942-46 Herbert A. Simon, Economic Sciences, 1978 Roger W. Sperry, M.D., Physiology...
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NOBEL PRIZE IN CHEMISTRY LAUREATES
News Wire article from: United Press International; 10/9/2002; 700+ words
; ...Archer John Porter Martin, United Kingdom; Richard Laurence Millington Synge, United Kingdom. 1951 -- Edwin Mattison McMillan, United States; Glenn Theodore Seaborg, United States. 1950 -- Otto Paul Hermann Diels, Germany; Kurt Alder...
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WINNERS OF THE NOBEL PRIZE IN CHEMISTRY
News Wire article from: United Press International; 10/8/2003; 700+ words
; ...Archer John Porter Martin, United Kingdom; Richard Laurence Millington Synge, United Kingdom. 1951 -- Edwin Mattison McMillan, United States; Glenn Theodore Seaborg, United States. 1950 -- Otto Paul Hermann Diels, Germany; Kurt Alder...
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Edwin Mattison McMillan
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Edwin Mattison McMillan 1907-91, American physicist, b. Redondo Beach, Calif., grad. California Institute of Technology, 1928, Ph.D. Princeton...
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McMillan, Edwin Mattison
Book article from: World Encyclopedia
McMillan, Edwin Mattison (1907–91) US physicist...neptunium and other transuranic elements . McMillan worked on the atomic bomb at Los Alamos...University of California at Berkeley. McMillan developed the synchrocyclotron that...
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The 1940s: Science and Technology: People in the News
Book article from: American Decades
...1940 physical chemist Philip Abelson and physicist Edwin McMillan discovered neptunium, the first transuranic (heavier...Sciences. A theory formulated by Berkeley physicist Edwin Mattison McMillan led to the invention of the synchrocyclotron, which...
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Seaborg, Glenn Theodore
Book article from: Chemistry: Foundations and Applications
...98), einsteinium (99), fermium (100), mendelevium (101), and nobelium (102). In 1951 Seaborg and Edwin Mattison McMillan received the Nobel Prize in chemistry "for their discoveries in the chemistry of the transuranium elements...
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