Top 10 similar words or synonyms for openlands

riberino    0.516805

dragaway    0.510938

cttcagcttt    0.505195

mcclatchydc    0.504753

aagaagagca    0.502674

wildlands    0.502350

ctgccgtggg    0.502236

gaggagtatg    0.501666

cggtttggcg    0.500089

ecocenter    0.497012

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for openlands

Article Example
Center for Neighborhood Technology As a result of a 2000 Openlands conference on natural resource protection in the tri-state (Wisconsin, Illinois, and Indiana) area, and Openlands’ inability to find a map of the green infrastructure for the three states, CNT launched the Natural Connections project. A data archive for a 19-county region was created, allowing users to download most of the data collected on green infrastructure for those areas. An interactive web mapping tool allows users to take this data and create customized maps of the region’s green infrastructure.
Lee Botts In 1970, while on staff at Openlands, Botts founded the Lake Michigan Federation, which today operates as the Alliance for the Great Lakes. Within the wave of new interest in environmental issues in the U.S. during that period, the Federation was the first independent citizens' organization dedicated to the protection and preservation of a specific Great Lake.
Grand Illinois Trail Credit for the full development of the Grand Illinois Trail goes to planners Richard Westfall and George Bellovics, trail advocacy organizations such as the League of Illinois Bicyclists and the Openlands Project, and by numerous citizens working to improve their communities.
Midewin National Tallgrass Prairie Several not-for-profit conservation organizations have played active roles in the restoration of high-quality tallgrass prairie, dolomite prairie, sedge meadows, swales and related communities at Midewin. These include the Wetlands Initiative, Openlands. and the Illinois chapter of The Nature Conservancy and several other members of the Chicago Wilderness collaborative.
Lee Botts Born Leila Carman in Oklahoma and raised in that state and in Kansas, Botts settled in Chicago in the early 1950s with her husband. While raising four children in the city's Hyde Park neighborhood in the 1950s and 1960s, Botts formed a strong personal interest in the Indiana Dunes. Botts became involved as a volunteer in several local issues such as the Hyde Park-Kenwood Community Conference, and took a leadership role in the campaign which in 1966 resulted in the creation of the federal Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore. In the early 1960s she was a columnist for, and then editor of, the weekly "Hyde Park Herald". In 1969 she became a staff member at the Open Lands Project, now known as Openlands, in Chicago.