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Domains targeting keyword forest & environment department

Keyword forest & environment department was used in the provided list of websites.

 
Number of websites/domains displayed: 9
Results found: 9
 

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Websites discovered:

Taner Timber - Specializing in Export Quality Hardwood, Veneer and Saw Logs,
http://pageoverview.com/website-report/tanertimber.com
  • Expected expiration: October 12th in 2019
  • Creation date: October 12th in 2000
  • Renew date: August 17th in 2016
Adirondack Council
http://pageoverview.com/website-report/adirondackcouncil.org
  • Expected expiration: March 17th in 2020
  • Creation date: March 17th in 1999
  • Renew date: March 7th in 2017
  • Google Analytics: 36985382-1
Official website of Department of Environment and Forests, Govt. of Arunachal Pradesh
http://pageoverview.com/website-report/arunachalforests.gov.in
  • Expected expiration: April 5th in 2018
  • Creation date: April 5th in 2006
  • Renew date: April 18th in 2017
GFA Consulting Group - GFA Consulting Group - Creating Opportunities
http://pageoverview.com/website-report/gfa-group.de
The GFA Consulting Group, based in Hamburg, has a sound track record of implementing complex studies and projects in over 130 countries since 1982.
  • Renew date: October 29th in 2013
  • Google Analytics: 422142-20
Forests, Environment & Wildlife Management Department | Government of Sikkim
http://pageoverview.com/website-report/sikkimforest.gov.in
Forest, Environment, Widlife, Biodiversity, Wetlands, Climate Change in Sikkim, Sericulture
  • Expected expiration: May 18th in 2018
  • Creation date: May 18th in 2005
  • Renew date: May 18th in 2017
PEER - Home
http://pageoverview.com/website-report/peer.org
  • Expected expiration: October 1st in 2021
  • Creation date: October 2nd in 1996
  • Renew date: May 9th in 2016
Cañada Alamosa Project
http://pageoverview.com/website-report/canadaalamosaproject.org
The Cañada Alamosa Project is a joint archeological undertaking of the Cañada Alamosa Institute, Monticello, New Mexico, and Human Systems Research of Las Cruces, New Mexico. Its purpose is to study, understand, and relate the stories of the generations of people who lived along Alamosa Creek, a perennial stream flowing through Socorro and Sierra Counties to the Rio Grande'River in southwest New Mexico, during the past 2000 years. Karl Laumbach, the project archaeologist and team excavations have been conducted at four major pithouse and pueblo sites in upper Cañada Alamosa (Monticello Canyon). They are the Victorio Site (pithouse and Tularosa Phase), Pinnacle Ruin (Magdalena Phase), the Kelly Canyon Site (Socorro Phase), and the Montoya Site (Mimbres Phase). The efforts and support of many individuals and organizations have been essential to CAP’s accomplishments. They include students and archaeologists from the University of Colorado, Boulder, and Eastern New Mexico University, Portales; volunteers from Earthwatch Institute, Maynard, MA; staff of the New Mexico Farm and Ranch Heritage Museum, Las Cruces; and staff of the New Mexico Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources, Socorro, and many other scholars, scientists, students, crew members, and neighbors. Field teams lead by Karl Laumbach of Human Systems Research and Stephen Lekson of the University of Colorado performed a brief reconnaissance survey of the area in 1988. In 1991-1992, Laumbach led a more extensive survey which included the first recordings of the Victorio and Montoya Sites. The effort was funded by the Department of the Interior as it considered nominating the area for national monument status. That never came to pass, but the resulting research, including an ethnohistoric study by Lekson, became the starting point for the Cañada Alamosa Project. Monticello Box Ranch, a small ranch containing a cluster of significant sites in the canyon, was offered for sale in the late 1990s. Laumbach persuaded the sellers to offer it as a preservation property. The effort bore fruit when Trudy and Denny O’Toole acquired the property in 1998. The O’Tooles established the non-profit Cañada Alamosa Institute, Inc. and joined forces with Laumbach’s non-profit employer Human Systems Research, Inc. to create the Cañada Alamosa Project.The Alamosa drainage encompasses approximately 725 square miles and ranges in elevation from 4,400 to 10,334 feet above sea level. The drainage includes privately held lands as well as lands administered by the United States Forest Service (Cibola and Gila National Forests), the Bureau of Land Management (Las Cruces District), and the New Mexico State Land Office. It takes in portions of Socorro, Sierra, Grant, and Catron counties. The principal research goals of the Cañada Alamosa Project are to answer questions about human habitation and migration in a cultural borderland, the drainage of the Rio Alamosa, and to place those findings in the broader context of researchers’ and the public’s understanding of the ways human communities evolve through interaction with a dynamic environment and each other over time.
  • Expected expiration: April 6th in 2018
  • Creation date: April 6th in 2010
  • Renew date: January 20th in 2016
  • Google Analytics: 80117971-2
ENVIS Centre of Odisha's State of Environment
http://pageoverview.com/website-report/orienvis.nic.in
ENVIS Centre of Odisha's State of Environment, Forest & Environment Department,Orissa, Ministry of Environment, Forests & Climate Change, Govt of India
    Hawai‘i Association of Watershed Partnerships — Sustaining Healthy Forested Watersheds for Hawaii's Communities
    http://pageoverview.com/website-report/hawp.org
    The Hawaii Association of Watershed Partnerships (HAWP) is comprised of nine Watershed Partnerships on six islands. Watershed Partnerships are voluntary alliances of landowners and other partners working collaboratively to protect forested watersheds for water recharge, conservation, and other ecosystem services. HAWP seeks to increase the management and protection of such areas by raising the capacity of Watershed Partnerships, facilitating the sharing of watershed management knowledge, building public support and awareness of watershed values, and developing sustainable funding sources. The HAWP website is to a place to learn about HAWP itself, the individual watershed partnerships, view watershed resources such as websites, documents, articles, pictures and images, and to learn how you can help and to contact us as well as the latest news and announcements concerning either HAWP or WPs.
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