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Rocky Mountain National Park was established in 1915, one year
before the creation of the National Park Service. The mandate of
the National Park Service is to preserve and protect areas of
exquisite beauty and cultural value for the benefit and enjoyment
of future generations. National parks mean many things to many
people, and, in often stirring words, a National Parks and
Conservation Association report states the National Park System is
a magnificent and uniquely American gift to the American people and
the world. In the early years of the Service, park superintendents
actively promoted and developed parks to accommodate visitors.
Then, as now, parks represented a democratic ideal, that even the
greatest treasures should be available to all. Seventy five years
ago, however, park managers saw little need for active management
of natural resources, unless it was to enhance visitors'
experience. And few managers saw the need for a stable and
independent research program on which to base management decisions.
Thus began a legacy of erratic, often passive, resource management
based more on politics and in-house studies than on validated
scientific informa tion. The world is a different place than it was
75 years ago. Human population growth, changes in land use, and
ever more sophisticated technology affect the very fabric of life
on Earth. As local-, regional-, and global-scale changes occur from
human tampering with the environment, the integrity of natural
ecosystems is threatened worldwide."
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