Skip header and navigation

Revise Search

2 records – page 1 of 1.

Holding our ground : protecting America's farms and farmland

https://collections.lancasterhistory.org/en/permalink/lhdo14
Author
Daniels, Tom.
Date of Publication
c1997.
Call Number
333.76 D186
Responsibility
Tom Daniels and Deborah Bowers.
ISBN
1559634820 (pbk.)
Author
Daniels, Tom.
Place of Publication
Washington, D.C
Publisher
Island Press,
Date of Publication
c1997.
Physical Description
xvi, 334 p. : ill., maps, forms ; 25 cm.
Notes
Includes bibliographical references (p. 319-322) and index.
Subjects
Land use, Rural - United States.
Regional planning - United States.
Agriculture - United States.
Agriculture and state - United States.
Additional Author
Bowers, Deborah.
Location
Lancaster History Library - Book
Call Number
333.76 D186
Less detail

Preserving large farming landscapes : The case of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania

https://collections.lancasterhistory.org/en/permalink/lhdo20674
Author
Daniels, Tom.
Date of Publication
2017.
Call Number
630.7 D184
Responsibility
by Tom Daniels and Lauren Payne-Riley..
Author
Daniels, Tom.
Date of Publication
2017.
Physical Description
15 p. ; 29 cm.
Summary
Preserving large farming landscapes is one of the main goals of farmland preservation programs. Other goals include protecting highly productive soils, maintaining and enhancing the local farming economy, and promoting locally produced fresh food. Farmland preservation programs take time, however, because of the hefty funding requirements and the detailed process of preserving farmland through the acquisition of conservation easements by purchase or donation. The standard measures of dollars spent and farmland acres preserved do not give an accurate picture of the spatial outcomes of preservation and preservation effectiveness. Three other measures better reflect the spatial effectiveness of farmland preservation: acreage and percentage of preserved farm parcels located in agricultural zones, number and acreage of preserved farm parcels in large contiguous blocks, and number and acreage of preserved farm parcels along growth boundaries. Scattered preserved farms and preserved farms not located in agricultural zones are likely to face more nonfarm development nearby as well as problems with non- farm neighbors. The farmland preservation effort in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, provides an important case study of the pattern of farmland preservation over time. Other counties and land trusts can employ geographic information systems (GIS) methods in this study to monitor and evalu- ate the progress of their farmland preservation efforts.
Subjects
Farms - Pennsylvania - Lancaster County
Additional Author
Payne-Riley, Lauren.
Location
Lancaster History Library - Periodical Article
Call Number
630.7 D184
Less detail