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Has the National Park Service lost sight of its science mission?

For many, the National Park Service is seen as an agency of friendly rangers tasked with helping them get the most out of their national park vacation. But the agency is much more complex than that. Indeed, it could be seen as one of the country’s most science-focused agencies, as it deals with all sorts of "ologies" – biology, paleontology, archaeology, sociology, ecology, cetology, bioecology, and, in light of the popularity of dark night skies, even planetology.

With such a role in both the federal government and society, is the National Park Service living up to that role? Is it able to? Is the agency properly using science to guide its mission? To explore those questions, we’re joined today by Michael Soukup and Gary Machlis, coauthors of a new book, American Covenant, National Parks, Their Promise and our Nation’s Future.

:02 National Parks Traveler introduction
:12 Episode introduction with Kurt Repanshek
1:14 Sieur de Monts - Nature’s Symphony - The Sounds of Acadia
1:28 Potrero Group
1:55 Friends of Acadia
2:22 North Cascades Institute
2:42 Washington’s National Park Fund 
3:23 American Convenant: Kurt Repanshek discusses this new book with its authors, Michael Soukup and Gary Machlis.
20:25 Beyond the Reef - Tim Heintz and Grant Geissman - Seascapes: A Musical Journey
20:46 National Parks Traveler
20:59 Blue Ridge Parkway Foundation
21:22 Western National Parks Association
21:44 Grand Teton National Park Foundation
22:14 Interior Federal Credit Union 
22:58 The conversation around American Covenant continues.
47:18 Blue Mist - Randy Petersen - The Sounds of Shenandoah
47:34 Episode Closing
47:52 Orange Tree Productions
48:26 Splitbeard Productions
48:38 National Parks Traveler footer

Comments

See CREATING WILDERNESS: A Transnational History of the Swiss National Park by Patrick Kupper 2014, for a thorough examination of this issue.


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