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Mailinglist:wwp@yahoogroups.com
Sender:D.I. Felipe B. González
Date/Time:2004-May-26 17:42:00
Subject:Re: WWPano: more about World Heritage sites

Thread:


wwp@yahoogroups.com: Re: WWPano: more about World Heritage sites D.I. Felipe B. González 2004-May-26 17:42:00
Hi Don!

Hi everyone!

I?m in. I plan to shoot Mexico City?s first square (El Z?calo), most probably from its north eastern corner so I?ll attempt to capture the corner of El Sagrario Metropolitan with Palacio Nacional. 

Best regards

Desde las regiones subtropicales de M?xico


Felipe B. 



  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: G. Donald Bain 
  To: #removed# 
  Sent: Tuesday, May 25, 2004 1:59 PM
  Subject: WWPano: more about World Heritage sites


  There are 754 officially designated UNESCO World Heritage Sites. They 
  are listed by region and country at:
        http://whc.unesco.org/nwhc/pages/sites/main.htm

  They have been selected by the World Heritage Committee of UNESCO (the 
  United Nations Educational, Cultural, and Scientific Organization). 
  More information about this group and their program at:
        http://whc.unesco.org/pg.cfm

  The sites are scattered widely over the surface of the earth. Since the 
  definition of world heritage includes natural landscapes as well as 
  man-made ones, there are sites in both heavily populated regions and 
  remote areas. They celebrate world cultures from the neolithic to 
  relatively recent times. Some are single buildings, many are entire 
  historic towns or city centers, some are long abandoned.

  New sites are continuously being evaluated and added to the list - 25 
  last year, more to be announced at the next official meeting in July, 
  2004.

  The theme of the panorama shoot is world heritage, not just UNESCO 
  World Heritage sites. If you can make it to one of the official sites 
  for the Solstice, by all means do so. But if you cannot, you are free 
  to photograph your idea of an important heritage site.

  There are so many ways a site can be of world significance. In my area 
  (the San Francisco Bay Area) for example, I would include the Golden 
  Gate Bridge, one of man's greatest and most graceful technical 
  achievements; the San Francisco Opera House, founding place of the 
  United Nations; the Franciscan missions, last and furthest effort of 
  the Spanish empire; Fort Ross, similarly the ultimate extension of 
  Russia; maybe even the Cyclotron at Berkeley, birthplace of the nuclear 
  age. It might be historically premature now, but Silicon Valley will 
  some day need to be recognized for its role in our cultural evolution 
  -- perhaps the garage that Hewlett-Packard was founded in, or the Apple 
  campus?

  Natural areas have world heritage significance also. Many American 
  sites are famous national parks such as Yellowstone and Yosemite. But 
  smaller, lesser known parks qualify equally - Baxter State Park in New 
  York, famous for fall colors, is one that comes to mind.

  So if you can't make it to a UNESCO inscribed site, make your own 
  nomination. Wouldn't it be a thrill if some time in the future UNESCO 
  were to agree and designate it?
  -----
  For more information:
        Join Yahoo Groups and go to http://groups.yahoo.com/groups/wwp/      Visit 
  the web site at http://GeoImages.Berkeley,edu/wwp.html (to be updated 
  soon)
  -----
  Don Bain - #removed#
  Landis Bennett - #removed#



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  For more information:
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