National Park Service
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Item Assessment of Alternatives: Visitor/Administrative Facility Sites, Knife River Indian Villages National Historic Site, North Dakota(1980) United States. National Park Service. Denver Service CenterIn 1974 Knife River Indian Villages National Historic Site was authorized by Congress to preserve certain historic and archeologic resources of Plains Indian cultures. All lands have been acquired by the National Park Service. The historic site now has temporary administrative offices and interpretive facilities 3.5 miles north of Stanton (see Existing Conditions Map). Until permanent facilities are available closer to Stanton, guided tours and minimal interpretive and orientation displays will be centered at this location. Providing visitor and interpretive facilities and programs is particularly critical, because the cultural resources and their significance are not apparent to the average visitor. Interpretive facilities and programs are necessary for the national historic site to be appropriately used, appreciated, and valued by the public. Permanent administrative facilities are also needed for optimum protection of the irreplacable archeological resources, coordination and management of interpretive programs, and maintenance of the above programs and facilities. The alternatives presented in this assessment to solve the previously mentioned problems all conform with the proposals made in the Knife River Indian Villages Master Plan.Item Environmental Assessment, Revised General Management Plan: Knife River Indian Villages National Historic Site, North Dakota.(1986) United States. National Park Service. Rocky Mountain Regional OfficeThis plan sets forth the basic management philosophy for Knife River Indian Villages National Historic Site (KNRI) and provides strategies for addressing issues and achieving identified management objectives. This document also discloses the potential environmental consequences that may result from implementation of various management alternatives. It documents the steps used by the National Park Service (NPS) in the process of revising a general management plan (GMP) including issue i identification. Chapter II of this document illustrates the NPS proposed plan.Item Item General Management Plan, Development Concept Plans, Land Protection Plan, Environmental Assessment, Theodore Roosevelt National Park, North Dakota(1986) United States. National Park ServiceReview draft. This document was prepared to replace the 1973 Master Plan for Theodore Roosevelt National Park. That plan has become obsolete and no longer applicable for resolution of current issues involving the park. Two recently approved reports were instrumental in the preparation and understanding of this document; namely the "Statement for Management" (1985) and the Natural Resources Management Plan and Environmental Assessment (1984).Item Knife River Indian Villages National Historic Site, North Dakota: General Management Plan. [Revised August 1986](1986) United States. National Park Service. Rocky Mountain Regional OfficeThe purpose of this revised GMP is to set forth the basic management strategies for achieving identified objectives. It also outlines the appropriate level of development necessary to provide visitor use and enjoyment of the national historic site while protecting its natural and cultural resources.Item Knife River Indian Villages National Historic Site: Statement for Management(1986) United States. National Park Service. Rocky Mountain Regional OfficeThe statement for management (SFM) provides an up-to-date inventory of the park's condition and an analysis of its problems. It does not involve any prescriptive decisions on future management and use of the park, but it provides a format for evaluating conditions and identifying major issues and information voids. The statement for management is used by park management to determine the nature and extent of required plans and studies to be programmed in the outline for planning requirements and related documents.Item Knife River: Knife River Indian Villages National Historic Site, North Dakota(1990) United States. National Park ServiceOfficial Map and GuideItem Statement for Management: Fort Union Trading Post National Historic Site(1985) United States. National Park ServiceFort Union Trading Post National Historic Site is just above the confluence of the Yellowstone and Missouri Rivers, straddling the latter watercourse as well as the boundary dividing North Dakota and Montana. The park extends into four counties: Williams and McKenzie in North Dakota and Roosevelt and Richland in Montana. The park is within the At-Large Congressional District of North Dakota and East Congressional District of Montana.