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The Peak District, Britain's first national park, is a land of
great natural beauty, visited by millions of people every year.
This New Naturalist volume on the region highlights the wonder and
magic of its windswept vistas, rock formations, storied history and
fantastic wildlife, revealing its ecological foundations, showing
how it has fared over the centuries and projecting what the future
might hold. As a botanist and ecologist who has spent her working
life in the Peak District, Penny Anderson brings an ecological
perspective, viewing the habitats and their species as an
interconnected whole linked to the development of the landscape
through its geology and geomorphological processes, while
simultaneously weaving in human history and local myths and legends
to bring to life the evolution of the area. The Peak District is a
special place at an ecological crossroads where many northern and
southern species meet. It has splendidly rich wildlife, varied
ecosystems and a long history of human interaction with the land,
and this book gives a flavour of its diversity and value.
The Peak District, Britain's first national park, is a land of
great natural beauty, visited by millions of people every year.
This New Naturalist volume on the region highlights the wonder and
magic of its windswept vistas, rock formations, storied history and
fantastic wildlife, revealing its ecological foundations, showing
how it has fared over the centuries and projecting what the future
might hold. As a botanist and ecologist who has spent her working
life in the Peak District, Penny Anderson brings an ecological
perspective, viewing the habitats and their species as an
interconnected whole linked to the development of the landscape
through its geology and geomorphological processes, while
simultaneously weaving in human history and local myths and legends
to bring to life the evolution of the area. The Peak District is a
special place at an ecological crossroads where many northern and
southern species meet. It has splendidly rich wildlife, varied
ecosystems and a long history of human interaction with the land,
and this book gives a flavour of its diversity and value.
In early 1986, one of us (D.M.S.) was constructing an artificial
intelligence system to design algorithms, and the other (A.P.A.)
was getting started in program transformations research. We shared
an office, and exchanged a few papers on the systematic development
of algorithms from specifications. Gradually we realized that we
were trying to solve some of the same problems. And so, despite
radical differences between ourselves in research approaches, we
set out together to see what we could learn from these papers.
That's how this book started: a couple of graduate students trying
to cope with The Literature. At first, there was just a list of
papers. One of us (D.M.S.) tried to cast the papers in a uniform
framework by describing the problem spaces searched, an approach
used in artificial intelligence for understanding many tasks. The
generalized problem space descriptions, though useful, seemed to
abstract too much, so we decided to compare papers by different
authors dealing with the same algorithm. These comparisons proved
crucial: for then we began to see similar key design choices for
each algorithm.
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