Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

New Approaches to Modelling Wilderness Quality in Iceland

View through CrossRef
Much of Europe’s remaining wilderness areas are found in Iceland, yet few are formally protected despite ongoing threats from renewable energy exploitation and 4 × 4 usage. Robust and repeatable approaches are required to map wilderness landscape qualities in support of developing policy on designations that meet international standards. We present an approach to mapping wilderness that is based on internationally recognised methods and customised to suit the unique nature of Icelandic landscapes. We use spatially explicit models of wilderness attributes that measure human impact from vehicular access, land use and visible human features rather than relying on proxy measures such as buffer zones. Seventeen wilderness areas are identified across the Central Highlands and surrounding areas, totalling some 28,470 km2. These are compared to existing mapping projects. The character of these areas is described using additional spatial data models on openness, ruggedness and accessibility from settlements, together with information on mobile phone coverage and grazing patterns. This is the most detailed mapping of wilderness in Iceland to date and an important step towards the formal definition of boundaries of wilderness areas meeting IUCN Category 1b and Wild Europe Working Definition in Iceland.
Title: New Approaches to Modelling Wilderness Quality in Iceland
Description:
Much of Europe’s remaining wilderness areas are found in Iceland, yet few are formally protected despite ongoing threats from renewable energy exploitation and 4 × 4 usage.
Robust and repeatable approaches are required to map wilderness landscape qualities in support of developing policy on designations that meet international standards.
We present an approach to mapping wilderness that is based on internationally recognised methods and customised to suit the unique nature of Icelandic landscapes.
We use spatially explicit models of wilderness attributes that measure human impact from vehicular access, land use and visible human features rather than relying on proxy measures such as buffer zones.
Seventeen wilderness areas are identified across the Central Highlands and surrounding areas, totalling some 28,470 km2.
These are compared to existing mapping projects.
The character of these areas is described using additional spatial data models on openness, ruggedness and accessibility from settlements, together with information on mobile phone coverage and grazing patterns.
This is the most detailed mapping of wilderness in Iceland to date and an important step towards the formal definition of boundaries of wilderness areas meeting IUCN Category 1b and Wild Europe Working Definition in Iceland.

Related Results

Wilderness, Morality, and Value
Wilderness, Morality, and Value
What if wilderness is bad for wildlife? This question motivates the philosophical investigation in Wilderness, Morality, and Value. Environmentalists aim to protect wilderness, and...
Untrammeled by Man? An Ethnographic Approach of Outdoor Recreation Management in Charon's Garden Wilderness
Untrammeled by Man? An Ethnographic Approach of Outdoor Recreation Management in Charon's Garden Wilderness
Charon's Garden Wilderness Area within the Wichita Mountains National Wildlife Refuge in Oklahoma is a landscape that is granted federal protection through the Wilderness Act of 19...
Wilderness, Value of
Wilderness, Value of
Abstract Why should we preserve areas known as wilderness? What good is wilderness preservation? What is wilderness preservation for? An answer to each of these questions...
Wilderness and Everyday Life.
Wilderness and Everyday Life.
I challenge the dualistic view of wilderness that has influenced wilderness philosophy, politics and experience in recent years. In its place, I offer an alternative vision that re...
North Atlantic island destinations in tourists' minds
North Atlantic island destinations in tourists' minds
Purpose This study seeks to investigate the image that tourists visiting Iceland in the summer months have of Iceland as a tourist destination, and whether the po...
The Oriental Turn of American Wilderness Literature in the Twentieth Century
The Oriental Turn of American Wilderness Literature in the Twentieth Century
Abstract: Early-American wilderness literature mainly praised the vast, magical, beautiful, and pleasant natural wilderness, expressed ideas of returning to nature, and raised envi...
Long-term woodland restoration on lowland farmland through passive rewilding
Long-term woodland restoration on lowland farmland through passive rewilding
Natural succession of vegetation on abandoned farmland provides opportunities for passive rewilding to re-establish native woodlands, but in Western Europe the patterns and outcome...
Imaging of the Mantle Transition Zone with SS Precursors in the Iceland-Mid-Atlantic Ridge Region
Imaging of the Mantle Transition Zone with SS Precursors in the Iceland-Mid-Atlantic Ridge Region
The nature of Iceland hotspot, located on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, has been subject of contentious debate. Earlier seismic tomographic studies have suggested the presence of a deep ...

Back to Top