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Words near each other
・ Giant Robot (Giant Robot album)
・ Giant Robot (magazine)
・ Giant Robot Project
・ Giant Rock
・ Giant roundleaf bat
・ Giant Runt
・ Giant sable antelope
・ Giant salamander
・ Giant salmon carp
・ Giant Sand
・ Giant sawbelly
・ Giant Schnauzer
・ Giant scops owl
・ Giant sea bass
・ Giant sea star
Giant Sequoia National Monument
・ Giant sequoias near Kölpin
・ Giant Silva
・ Giant skipper
・ Giant Skyrocket (roller coaster)
・ Giant slalom
・ Giant slippery frog
・ Giant snakehead
・ Giant snipe
・ Giant solenodon
・ Giant solitary trichoepithelioma
・ Giant South American grasshopper
・ Giant Sparrow
・ Giant spiny
・ Giant Springs


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Giant Sequoia National Monument : ウィキペディア英語版
Giant Sequoia National Monument


The Giant Sequoia National Monument is a U.S. National Monument located in the southern Sierra Nevada in eastern central California. It is administered by the U.S. Forest Service as part of the Sequoia National Forest and includes 38 of the 39 Giant Sequoia (''Sequoiadendron giganteum'') groves that are located in the Sequoia National Forest, about half of the sequoia groves currently in existence, including one of the ten largest Giant Sequoias, the Boole Tree, which is 269 feet (82 m) high with a base circumference of 112 feet (38 m). The forest covers 824 square miles (1,326 square kilometers).
The monument is in two sections. The northern section surrounds General Grant Grove and other parts of Kings Canyon National Park and is administered by the Hume Lake Ranger District. The southern section, which includes Long Meadow Grove, is directly south of Sequoia National Park and is administered by the Western Divide Ranger District, surrounding the eastern half of the Tule River Indian Reservation.
The Giant Sequoia National Monument was Proclamation 7295 by President Bill Clinton on April 15, 2000. The Presidential Proclamation was published in the Federal Register, Tuesday, April 25, 2000, Vol. 65, No. 80
==Monument Management==
The Presidential Proclamation required that a management plan be completed within three years. In January 2004, the Sequoia National Forest published and began implementation of the Giant Sequoia National Monument Management Plan, which provided for use by an international public as well as for the protection and restoration of 33 giant sequoia groves and their ecosystems. Subsequently, two lawsuits were brought challenging the Plan. In October 2006, Federal District Court Judge Charles Breyer found in favor of the plaintiffs and remanded the Plan to the U.S. Forest Service "…so that a proper Monument Plan can be developed in accordance with the Presidential Proclamation,… and in compliance with the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)…"
In January 2008, the Sequoia National Forest published a Notice of Intent (NOI) in the Federal Register that they intended to prepare an environmental impact statement and was beginning a year-long collaborative scoping process for development of a new Giant Sequoia National Monument Management Plan.〔http://www.fs.fed.us/r5/sequoia/gsnm_planning.html〕
As of August 2010 only one location in the Monument, the Generals Highway, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, but the Monument does have several hundred sites that are potentially eligible for the Register.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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