Wilderness Preservation

May 30, 1975

Report Outline
Campaign to Preserve Wild Areas
Origins of U.S. Wilderness System
Outlook for Wilderness Expansion
Special Focus

Campaign to Preserve Wild Areas

No part of earth is totally untouched by man. In this century, air pollution, nuclear fallout and sonic booms have penetrated to the most remote corners of the globe. It can be argued that every ecosystem on earth has been altered by human activity, and that there is no true wilderness left anywhere. However, there are clearly places on the planet which are for the most part still primeval, where the forces of nature are dominant, where humans are visitors who do not remain.

The world's surviving wilderness areas, disappearing at a rapid rate, are now the focus of an international struggle. Civilization, with its growing population and rising material demands, is moving relentlessly to develop the earth's remaining natural areas for energy, mineral, timber and other resources. At the same time, advocates of wilderness preservation are organizing a worldwide campaign to save what is left of these areas before they are gone forever.

Unlike other environmental issues—such as automobile emissions or water pollution, which affect people directly—wilderness preservation is seen by some as an elitist or esoteric concept. Relatively few people ever visit a wilderness in their lives, and some see little value in setting aside any wilderness for all time. They cannot identify with faraway places on society's frontiers which they feel have little to do with them. Others are genuinely concerned that civilization will need all the resources it can get in the coming years, and “locking up” wilderness will foreclose the options of development.

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Sep. 20, 2013  Future of the Arctic
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Nov. 06, 2012  Vanishing Biodiversity
Nov. 02, 2012  Managing Wildfires
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Jul. 2010  Plastic Pollution
Feb. 2010  Climate Change
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Feb. 29, 2008  Buying Green
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Dec. 01, 2006  The New Environmentalism
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Oct. 05, 2001  Invasive Species
Nov. 05, 1999  Saving Open Spaces
Jun. 11, 1999  Saving the Rain Forests
May 21, 1999  Setting Environmental Priorities
Mar. 19, 1999  Partisan Politics
Oct. 16, 1998  National Forests
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Aug. 23, 1996  Cleaning Up Hazardous Wastes
Mar. 31, 1995  Environmental Movement at 25
Jun. 19, 1992  Lead Poisoning
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Sep. 08, 1989  Free Market Environmental Protection
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Aug. 19, 1983  America's Disappearing Wetlands
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Nov. 16, 1979  Closing the Environmental Decade
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Nov. 14, 1973  Strip Mining
Dec. 01, 1971  Global Pollution
Jul. 21, 1971  Protection of the Countryside
Jan. 06, 1971  Pollution Technology
Jun. 19, 1968  Protection of the Environment
Oct. 30, 1963  Noise Suppression
BROWSE RELATED TOPICS:
Land Resources and Property Rights
National Parks and Reserves