References

 

Arizona Desert Bighorn Sheep Society

 

Brooks, Richard H., Wilson, Richard, and Sheilagh Brooks

1981 An Archaeological Inventory Report of the Owlshead/Amargosa-Mojave Basin Planning Units of the Southern California Desert Area. Prepared for the U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management.

 

Bureau of Land Management, U.S. Department of the Interior

1980 California Desert Conservation Area Plan. Riverside, CA: Bureau of Land Management.

1982. A Sikes Act Management Plan for the Eureka Valley Dunes. Ridgecrest, CA.

 1988 East Mojave Scenic Area. Management Plan, Needles, CA: Bureau of Land Management.

 1995a Briggs Project, Inyo County. Final Environmental Impact Statement /Environmental Impact Report. Ridgecrest, CA: Bureau of Land Management. 2 Volumes.

1995b 1995 Wild Horse and Burro Statistics. Ridgecrest, CA: Bureau of Land Management.

 1996 Army’s Land Acquisition Project for the National Training Center (Ft. Irwin Expansion) Draft EIS. Riverside, CA: Bureau of Land Management.

 1997 Tonopah Resource Management Plan and Record of Decision. Tonopah, NV: Bureau of Land Management. 

1997 Tom Egan, Wildlife Biologist, personal communication.

 

California Department of Fish and Game

 

CalTrans

1996 1995 Traffic Volumes on the California State Highway System. Sacramento, CA: CalTrans

 

California Natural Diversity Database

 

Dasmann, R.F.

Davis, Emma Lou, Brown, Kathryn H., and Jacqueline Nichols

1980 Evaluation of Early Human Activities and Remains in the California Desert. U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management, California Desert District, Riverside, California: Cultural Resources Publications, Anthropology-History.

 

Douglas, C. L. and T. L. Hurst

1993 Review and Annotated Bibliography of Feral Burro Literature. Las Vegas, NV: Cooperative National Park Resources Studies Unit.

 

Douglas, C. L. and D. M. Leslie, Jr.

    1996 "Feral Animals on Rangelands." In Rangeland Wildlife, edited by P. R. Krausman, Chapter 17. Denver, CO: The Society for Rangeland Management.

ENSR Consulting

1996 Draft Environmental Impact Report, Mine Expansion Project, Molycorp Mountain Pass. Prepared for County of San Bernardino. Mountain Pass CA. SCH 92092042.

 

Evans, James R., Taylor, Gary C., and John S. Rapp

1976 Special Report 125, Mines and Mineral Deposits in Death Valley National Monument, California. Sacramento, CA: California Division of Mines and Geology.

 

Fish and Wildlife Service, U.S. Department of the Interior

1972 The Evaluation of Bighorn Habitat in Death Valley National Monument, by C.G. Hansen. FWS.

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1990 Recovery Plan for the Endangered and Threatened Species of Ash Meadows, Nevada. Portland, OR: FWS.

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Fowler, Catherine S., Dufort, Molly, Rusco, Mary, and the Historic Preservation Committee, Timbisha Shoshone Tribe

1995 Residence Without Reservation: Ethnographic Overview and Traditional Land Use Study, Timbisha Shoshone, Death Valley National Park, California. Prepared for U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service. under Cooperative Agreement CA8000-92-9003, Cooperative Agreement Order No. CA8011-92-9003. August 25, 1995.

 

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Geological Survey, U. S. Department of Interior

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Giles, R.H.

 

Greene, Linda W., and John A. Latschar

1981 Historic Resource Study, A History of Mining in Death Valley National Monument. 4 vols. U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Denver Service Center.

 

Haley, R.

1997 Data and analysis of the 1996 Mojave National Preserve burro survey. Boulder City, NV: Lake Mead National Recreation Area.

 

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Hitchcock, A.S. and A. Chase

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Hunt, Alice P.

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Leitner, Phil

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Levy, Benjamin

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Mallette, Robert D.

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Munz, Philip A.

1974 A Flora of Southern California. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.

 

Murphy, D. D. and K. E. Freas

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National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior

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National Research Council

1982 Wild and Free-Roaming Horses and Burros: Final Report. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press. (This report’s abstract reviewed in Douglas and Hurst, 1993).

 

Norwood, Richard H., and Charles S. Bull

1980 A Cultural Resource Overview of the Eureka, Saline, Panamint, and Darwin Region; East Central California. U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management, California Desert District, Riverside, California: Cultural Resources Publications, Anthropology-History.

 

Oldemeyer, John L.

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Pister, Edwin. P.

1997 Executive Secretary for the Desert Fishes Council, personal communication.

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Sampson, A.W. and B. S. Jespersin.

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Skinner, Mark W.

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Soltz, D. L. and R. J. Naiman

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Swinney, Mark

1997 Personal communication. Bureau of Land Management Tonopah, Nevada District Office.

 

Thelander, Carl G., editor in chief

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1988 Inyo National Forest Land and Resource Management Plan. Pacific Southwest Region: USDA Forest Service.

 

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1981 Desert Fever: An Overview of Mining in the California Desert. Canoga Park, California: Living West Press.

 

Wallace, William J.

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Warren, Claude N., and Robert H. Crabtree

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Warren, Claude N., Knack, Martha, and Elizabeth von Till Warren

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Warren, Elizabeth von Till Warren, and Ralph J. Roske

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Westec Services, Inc.

1978 A History of Land Use In the California Desert Conservation Area. Prepared for U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management, Desert Planning Staff, Riverside, California. San Diego, California.

 

Wilkerson, Gregg, Reynolds, Robert E., Lawler, David, and Benjamin Nafus

1995 "Fossil Resources Associated with Federal Lands in California." San Bernardino County Museum Association Quarterly Short Papers in Anthropology and Paleontology, XLII (No. 2, Spring 1995), pp. 11-18.

 

Williams, J. E., G. C. Kobetich and C. T. Benz

1981 Management aspects of relict populations inhibiting the Amargosa Canyon ecosystem. Presented at California riparian systems conference. University of California, Davis. September 17-19, 1981.

 


As the nation’s principal conservation agency, the Department of the Interior has responsibility for most of our nationally owned public lands and natural resources. This includes fostering sound use of our land and water resources; protecting our fish, wildlife, and biological diversity; preserving the environmental and cultural values of our national parks and historical places; and providing for the enjoyment of life through outdoor recreation. The department assesses our energy and mineral resources and works to ensure that their development is in the best interests of all our people by encouraging stewardship and citizen participation in their care. The department also has a major responsibility for American Indian reservation communities and for people who live in island territories under U.S. administration.

 

DEVA NPS D-171 / August 1998

 

  

United States Department of the Interior · National Park Service

 


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