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Lake Tahoe Basin

Lake Tahoe Basin
Author: United States. Forest Service. Lake Tahoe Basin Planning Team
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1
Release: 1972
Genre: Environmental policy
ISBN:

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Early Planning Efforts at Lake Tahoe

Early Planning Efforts at Lake Tahoe
Author: William Turrentine Jackson
Publisher:
Total Pages: 796
Release: 1974
Genre: Regional planning
ISBN:

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Lake Tahoe Basin Water Quality Plan

Lake Tahoe Basin Water Quality Plan
Author: Tahoe Regional Planning Agency
Publisher:
Total Pages: 264
Release: 1981
Genre: Tahoe, Lake, Region (Calif. and Nev.)
ISBN:

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Saving Lake Tahoe

Saving Lake Tahoe
Author: Michael J. Makley
Publisher: University of Nevada Press
Total Pages: 424
Release: 2014-03-14
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 0874179351

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The history of Lake Tahoe begins with the Washoe Indians who resided on its shores for thousands of years, with minimal impact on the landscape. The relatively brief American history at Lake Tahoe began in the mid-nineteenth century. Though awestruck by its beauty, the new arrivals were also intent on harvesting its abundant resources. In a mere half century, the basin’s forests and fisheries were destroyed, the lake’s pristine clarity dramatically reduced. Left alone, nature healed itself, and by the 1960s mature forests once again surrounded the lake and its water clarity improved, with visibility more than one hundred feet deep. However, Tahoe’s wonders brought a new kind of threat: millions of annual visitors and incessant development, including ski resorts and casinos. Saving Lake Tahoe looks at the interaction through the years between human activities and Tahoe’s natural ecosystems. It is a dramatic story of ecological disasters and near misses, political successes and failures. Utilizing primary sources and interviews with key figures, Makley provides a meticulously researched account of the battles surrounding the management of the Tahoe basin. Makley takes the story up to the present, describing the formation and evolution of a new type of governing body, the bistate Tahoe Regional Planning Agency, and groundbreaking efforts to utilize science in establishing policy. He depicts the passionate fights between those who seek to preserve the environment and advocates of individual property rights. Although Tahoe remains unique in its splendor, readers will understand why, with continued pressure for development, reversing environmental deterioration and improving the lake water’s clarity remain elusive goals.