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The Value of Wilderness:
Culture, Science and Law

Planning for the future of national parks means that park researchers have to study park resources to make sure they are not threatened. There are many ways that visitors can enjoy their national parks, by car, on foot, and like these two visitors, on bikes.
NPS Photos from left to right: Tour bus at Denali National Park, a national park researcher,
two bicyclists enjoy the beauty of Denali.

The 2004-2005 school year marked the 40th anniversary of the Wilderness Act (1964) and the 25th anniversary of the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act (ANILCA, 1980). These landmark legislations have had a major impact on wilderness and its use across America, particularly in Alaska. These acts, plus current legislation and policy, will continue to influence land use, conservation and preservation for many years to come.

The Value of Wilderness: Culture, Science and Law -- about wilderness lands in Alaska's national parks -- guides students as they gain the awareness and understanding to frame opinions on the value of wilderness. Then, using these insights, students become part of the continuing debate.

Perspectives Units:

Concepts of Wilderness - How do you define wilderness? In this activity, students will explore their personal definition of wilderness and, then, assign a value to it. They will consider the opinions of their classmates and professionals whose task it is to preserve wilderness lands or develop resources for consumption, such as timber.

Legal Webquest - Officials at Denali National Park and Preserve must consider a bewildering array of legal rules and regulations concerning wilderness. In this Webquest, students will investigate and then apply specific laws and other official regulations to evaluate a proposal for the development of Denali's backcountry, just as the managers of the park must do.

Culture Webquest - Students will take on the roles of the people who live and work within Gates of the Arctic National Park or the surrounding communities. These people represent many cultures - Athabaskan, Inupiat, Nunamiut, Euro-American. Some are students, teachers, park administrators, miners, hunters or guides. All of them have different viewpoints and understandings when they hear the word wilderness.

Science Webquest - In 1999, the National Park Service issued an Action Plan to substantially improve how it manages the natural resources under its care, a plan that calls for substantially increasing the role of science. Students will examine the importance of "doing science" to the continued well-being of our natural wilderness areas and their "precious cargo."

Commitment to Wilderness - The students have learned about the United States' wilderness lands; explored the history of the wilderness movement; investigated the laws that govern it; and, they have listened to the opinions of their fellow citizens on its value. Now, they will examine their commitment to personal positions on the value of wilderness to them.

Final Activity - Students will evaluate a proposal by EarthScope scientists who want to place install monuments of the Plate Boundary Observatory (PBOs) in or near wilderness lands in Alaska, as one method of tracking and learning more about earthquake and volcano activity in the U.S. and will make a recommendation to the parks service.