Landscape Aesthetics (AH 701-n) - Examples of Scenic Integrity Levels (Appendix H)
Other (Miscellaneous)
"This chapter [appendix] contains photographs and narrative descriptions on the six scenic integrity levels. As explained in Chapter 2, scenic integrity is a continuum that is subdivided into six levels, from very high to very low." [Appendix Introduction] [AH 701 pages 170-226]
"High quality scenery, especially scenery with natural-appearing landscapes, enhances peoples lives and benefits society. The Scenery Management System [SMS] presents a vocabulary for managing scenery and a systematic approach for determining the relative value and importance of scenery in a national forest. This handbook was written for national forest resource managers, landscape architects, and others interested in landscape aesthetics and scenery. Both students and the general public, our "constituents," will benefit from the straightforward approach of [this] system to a complex art and science. Ecosystems provide the environmental context for this scenery management system. The system is to be used in the context of ecosystem management to inventory and analyze scenery in a national forest, to assist in establishment of overall resource goals and objectives, to monitor the scenic resource, and to ensure high-quality scenery for future generations." [AH 701 Abstract]
L. Blocker, T. Slider, J. Ruchman, J. Mosier, L. Kok, J. Silbemagle, J. Beard, D. Wagner, G. Brogan, D. Jones, N. Laughlinn, L. Anderson (ECPD Draft)
1995
USDA Forest Service
57
Aesthetics, Landscape Ecology
National
Landscape, SMS
SO: 5100-001