Sanctuary

SET of (14) US National Conservation Land Trails System 50th Posters Print 13x19

Description: SET of (14) US National Conservation Land Trails System 50th Posters Prints 13" x 19" Beautiful collection of vintage style United States National Conservation Lands Trails System posters provided courtesy of the Bureau of Land Management celebrating 50th anniversary. Professionally printed on premium quality 260gsm Luster Photo Paper. Each print measures approximately 13" x 19" (330mm x 483mm) Includes the following 14 posters:Arizona National Scenic TrailCalifornia National Historic TrailContinental Divide National Historic TrailEl Camino Real de Tierra Adentro National Historic TrailIditarod National Historic TrailJuan Bautista de Anza National Historic TrailLewis and Clark National Historic TrailMormon Pioneer National Historic TrailNez Perce National Historic TrailOld Spanish National Historic TrailOregon National Historic TrailPacific Crest National Historic TrailPony Express National Historic Trail California/Colorado/Nevada/Utah/Wyoming Pony Express National Historic Trail Nevada Interested in a different size of this series? Please visit:18" x 24" - https://www.ebay.com/itm/395164854308 From Bureau of Land Management: "The National Conservation Lands encompass more than 30 million acres of specially designated places under the stewardship of the Bureau of Land Management. More than 875 areas, including national monuments, national conservation areas, wilderness areas, wilderness study areas, wild and scenic rivers, and national scenic and historic trails make up this collection of notable places. National Conservation Lands are designated to conserve the diverse ecological, cultural, and historical resources found within them. They are also recognized for their recreational, educational, and scientific values. The BLM is proud to recognize these special lands with an ongoing set of vintage-style posters." Arizona National Scenic Trail"The Arizona National Scenic Trail stretches just over 800 miles across the entire length of the state to connect deserts, mountains, forests, canyons, wilderness, history, communities and people. This non-motorized trail showcases Arizona’s diverse vegetation, wildlife and scenery, as well as unique historic and cultural sites. The route provides unparalleled opportunities for hikers, mountain bikers, equestrians and other trail users. Starting at the U.S.-Mexico border, the path climbs and descends from one “sky island” mountain range to another, gaining and losing thousands of feet in elevation and traversing biomes ranging from desert to boreal forest. Continuing across the Sonoran Desert, the route crosses the Gila River, winds through the Superstition Mountains and the Mazatzal Wilderness on its way to the Mogollon Rim and majestic San Francisco Peaks. The trail north takes travelers across the Grand Canyon through billions of years of geology. Topping out on the North Rim, conifer forests dominate the Kaibab Plateau, eventually giving way to red bluffs dotted with sagebrush as the trail nears the Utah border on the edge of the Vermilion Cliffs National Monument. It is the backbone of Arizona. The trail is now 100% complete. The BLM manages 45 miles: Buckskin Mountain, Gila River Canyons, and Tortilla Mountain passages. Whether you hike, run, pedal or ride, the adventure of a lifetime is waiting for you on the Arizona Trail." California National Historic Trail"The California National Historic Trail passes through BLM managed lands in California, Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, Utah and Wyoming. The trail was a mid-19th century highway for human movement to lures of gold and farmland in California. Numerous routes emerged in attempts to create the best available course. These fostered commerce and encouraged the development of transportation and communication networks. There were many changes in cultures of Native Americans along the way as hundreds of thousands of people and animals used the trail. Designated in 1992, this trail commemorates that which brought the country closer together and today offers auto touring, educational programs and visitor centers to present-day gold seekers and explorers. California The BLM in California manages four segments, nearly 140-miles, of the California National Historic Trail - the Applegate, the Lassen, the Nobles, and the Yreka. Lured by gold and farmland in California, the California National Historic Trail was a mid-19th century highway for migration to the west. Numerous routes emerged in attempts to create the best available course. Today, this trail offers auto touring, educational programs and visitor centers to present-day gold seekers and explorers. Idaho Idaho is the perfect destination to learn history of the West while traveling in the footsteps of the pioneers who traveled across the dusty sagebrush-covered desert in search of a new home and a better life. Experience the California National Historic Trail by exploring south-central Idaho’s City of Rocks where you see names of past visitors inscribed in the rock in axle grease. Nevada The California Trail, located in northern Nevada, stretches across 700 miles of BLM-managed land. In 2012 BLM opened the California Trail interpretive Center along Interstate 80 near Elko. Oregon Known in Oregon as the Applegate Trail or Cut-off, the Southern Emigrant Road, and the South Road, the trail entered the state west of Lake Miller, crossed the Klamath River and Cascade Mountains, and after entering the Rogue River Valley turned north to its terminus in the Willamette Valley. Utah The California National Historic Trail was a mid-19th century highway for human movement to lures of gold and farmland in California. Native American cultures changed along the way as hundreds of thousands of people and animals used the trail. The trail was designated in 1992. Wyoming There are 472 miles of the California National Historic Trail in Wyoming. The discovery of the South Pass route over the Rocky Mountains was the primary reason for the location of the Oregon, Mormon Pioneer, California and Pony Express historic trails in Wyoming." Continental Divide National Scenic Trail"The Continental Divide National Scenic Trail goes through BLM managed lands in Colorado, Idaho, Montana, New Mexico, Wyoming. It was designated for its scenic significance. It is also considered the "King of Trails," more difficult than its sister long distance trails, the Appalachian and Pacific Crest. It navigates dramatically diverse ecosystems through mountain meadows, granite peaks, and high-desert surroundings. Upon designation in 1978, Congress identified a corridor for this trail, straddling along the backbone of the North American continent—the Divide—for the future placement of the trail. When complete, the trail will climb and descend the peaks and cross the high-deserts of the Rocky Mountains from Canada to Mexico for 3,100 miles. Any public use of New Mexico State Trust Lands on the Continental Divide National Scenic Trail is strictly under the jurisdiction of the New Mexico State Land Office and requires a recreational access permit." El Camino Real de Tierra Adentro National Historic Trail"Designated in October 2000, El Camino Real de Tierra Adentro National Historic Trail recognizes the primary route between the colonial Spanish capital of Mexico City and the Spanish provincial capitals in what are now Mexico and New Mexico between the 16th and 19th centuries. The “Royal Road of the Interior” introduced Europeans, their institutions, and their goods, into the heart of the indigenous world of long-lived Pueblo communities and their nomadic neighbors. Today, the cultural corridor created along the Camino Real reflects the heritage and riches of Native America, the Old World, and the modern societies of the United States and Mexico. BLM jointly administers the trail with the National Park Service. The trail crosses BLM managed lands in New Mexico." Iditarod National Historic Trail"The Iditarod Trail is the only winter trail in the National Trails System and the only Congressionally-designated National Historic Trail in Alaska. The Iditarod National Historic Trail system is comprised of a 1,000-mile main trail between Seward and Nome, and an additional 1,400 miles of side/connecting trails that link communities and historic sites, or provide parallel route. Congress established the Iditarod as a National Historic Trail in 1978. A May 17, 1978, Senate report noted that the trails comprising the Iditarod National Historic Trail “…offer a rich diversity of climate, terrain, scenery, wildlife, recreation and resources in an environment largely unchanged since the days of the stampeders. It is the isolated, primitive quality of this historical environment that makes the National Historic Iditarod Trail proposal unique. Nowhere in the National Trail System is there such an extensive landscape, so demanding of durability and skill during its winter season of travel. On the Iditarod, today’s adventurer can duplicate the experience and challenge of yesteryear.” Today, BLM works with partners to maintain and promote the historic qualities that make the Iditarod unique among our nation’s National Historic Trails. As the designated Trail Administrator, BLM facilitates efforts by volunteers and local, state and federal agencies on behalf of the entire trail. BLM maintains about 120 miles of the trail, including five public shelter cabins. The trail segments that cross BLM-managed lands are managed as part of BLM's National Conservation Lands." Juan Bautista de Anza National Historic Trail"Juan Bautista de Anza National Historic Trail goes through BLM managed lands in Arizona and California. In exploring the trail today, one can experience diverse deserts, mountains, and coastal areas, and learn the historical roles of American Indian and Spanish cultures in the settlement of Arizona and California. "¡Vayan Subiendo!" "Everyone mount up!" A familiar call from Spanish Lt. Colonel Juan Bautista de Anza. In 1775-76, Anza led more than 240 men, women and children on an overland journey across the frontier of New Spain to settle Alta California. Follow 1200 miles in the footsteps of this intrepid, multiethnic expedition, and explore the rich cultural history of communities from Nogales, Arizona, to San Francisco. The 1,200-mile Juan Bautista de Anza National Historic Trail commemorates, protects, marks, and interprets the route traveled by Anza and the colonists during the years 1775 and 1776 from Sonora, Mexico (New Spain), to settle Alta California and establish a mission and presidio at today's San Francisco, California. The Anza Trail was designated a National Historic Trail by Congress in 1990 through an amendment to the National Trails System Act (16 U.S.C. 1241-51)." Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail"In 1804, Meriwether Lewis and William Clark began their journey along what is now the Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail. The trail travels through Idaho, Montana, North Dakota, Oregon, South Dakota, and Washington. With significant assistance from American Indian tribes along the route, the expedition was able to map and explore extensive western lands acquired only one year earlier from France by the United States in the Louisiana Purchase. Today, BLM manages stretches of the trail which look essentially the same as when Lewis and Clark first saw them. The only remnant of the expedition is Captain Clark's signature at Pompey’s Pillar National Monument in Montana. The trail was designated in to recognize the route’s role in shaping the Nation’s identity. Today, thousands of visitors follow this 3,700-mile, 11-State route that extends from Camp Wood, Illinois, to the Oregon coast. Idaho The sun sets on the Lemhi Pass near the Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail in Idaho. Copyright: Glenn OakleyIn Idaho, the area surrounding the Lewis and Clark National Historic trail traverses four habitats: river valley, sagebrush grasslands, mountain forests and meadows and high desert canyons. Visitors here will be treated to incredible views of the Lemhi Valley and the surrounding mountain ranges; truly some of the finest scenery in America! The area still looks much the same today as it did when the Lewis and Clark Expedition journeyed here. Between May 1804 and September 1806, Lewis and Clark’s Corps of Discovery traveled 3,700 miles from the plains of the Midwest to the shores of the Pacific Ocean and back. In their search for a water route to the Pacific, they opened a window to the West for the young United States. Idaho’s Lemhi Valley, Camas and Weippe Prairies, along with the Salmon and Clearwater Rivers, played important roles in this expedition. Following the expedition, the trail through the Lemhi Valley continued to be used for exploration and fur trade through the 19th century and helped local settlement, mining and transportation. The expedition followed long-established Indian trails of the local Agai Dika [“salmon eater”] Shoshone, who came to be known as the Lemhi Shoshone. Archaeological evidence suggests that the Shoshone may have arrived 3,500 years ago here. The chinook and sockeye salmon that returned here from the Pacific Ocean every summer to spawn were at the center of Lemhi life and culture. Still well-known for its colorful wildflower displays especially in spring and summer, Captain Lewis collected three new plant species around the Lemhi Pass including mountain maple, common snowberry and Lewis’s monkey flower. Recreation opportunities for hiking, fishing and exploring abound throughout the high peaks of the Lemhi Range. Visitors here may also be lucky enough to spot wildlife like elk, mule and whitetail deer, black bear, moose, pronghorn antelope, coyotes and many smaller mammal species. Early mornings and evenings are the times to look for wildlife, particularly where forest and meadow meet. In Idaho, the BLM manages 35 miles of the Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail. Montana A view of a rock outcropping along the Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail.The BLM manages about 330 miles of land along the National Park Service's Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail. Of the 330 BLM miles, 310 are in Montana and include the crown jewels of the trail—Pompeys Pillar and the Upper Missouri River Breaks National Monuments." Mormon Pioneer National Historic Trail"The Mormon Pioneer National Historic Trail passes through Wyoming and Utah. It once carried tens of thousands of Mormon emigrants to the Great Basin. In 1847, Mormon Church leader Brigham Young led pioneers west toward the Great Salt Lake Valley, across about 1,200 miles of extreme climate and terrain. Today, the historic route and sites along the way offer a glimpse into the Mormon settlement history." Nez Perce National Historic Trail"The Nez Perce National Historic Trail passes through Idaho, Montana, Oregon, and Wyoming. Added to the National Trails System in 1986, the Nez Perce National Historic Trail commemorates the flight of the Nez Perce Indians from their homeland in the Pacific Northwest to Canada to escape capture by the U.S. military. Using an indirect escape route as dictated by terrain and strategy, the Nez Perce passed through four states and traveled over 1,170 miles, from Wallowa Lake, Oregon, to the Bear Paw Battlefield near Chinook, Montana." Old Spanish National Historic Trail"The Old Spanish National Historic Trail goes through Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, and Utah. It opened a land route across 19th century Mexico between the Tierra Adentro, the fabled, yet isolated place that would become New Mexico, and California’s missions and burgeoning settlements. When he left Abiquiu, New Mexico for California in 1829 with 40 men and 200 pack mules, Antonio Armijo blazed a trail between the two colonies that had frustrated explorers for over a century. The Abiquiu party’s woolen blankets and tanned hides were welcomed in textile-starved California. In return, the horses and mules Armijo and his followers on the trail brought east would become the working stock for miners, American and Mexican military, and farmers from northern Mexico to the east coast of the United States." Oregon National Historic Trail"For over 80 years in the nineteenth century, an estimated 300,000 emigrants used the Oregon National Historic Trail as a pathway to the Pacific. Fur traders, gold seekers, missionaries and others traveled west on the approximately 2,000 miles of trail, from Missouri towards the Rocky Mountains to Oregon’s Willamette Valley. The once 5-month journey can now be traveled via auto touring, and portions can be travel via foot, mountain bike, and horseback. The trail goes through Wyoming, Idaho, Oregon and Washington." Pacific Crest National Scenic Trail"Designated for its scenic significance, Pacific Crest National Scenic Trail spans California desert valleys to Northwestern rain forests, offering hikers and equestrians a wide variety of climate and terrain. It crosses California, Oregon, and Washington, with starting points in Canada and Mexico. The Pacific Crest has the greatest elevation change of any of the National Scenic Trails, from near sea level to the crest of the Sierra and Cascade mountain ranges." Pony Express National Historic Trail"The Pony Express National Historic Trail goes through BLM managed lands in California, Colorado, Nevada, Utah, and Wyoming. The Pony Express National Historic Trail is the route where young men on horseback once carried the nation’s mail across the country between 1860 and 1861. The horse-and-rider system became the United States’ most direct and practical means of east-west communications before the telegraph, delivering mail in the unprecedented time of ten days. Today, one can auto-tour the route visiting interpretive sites and museums, or hike, bike, or horseback ride various trail segments." About Lumber City Prints Lumber City Prints produces fine art prints using archival quality inks and professional Canon and Epson print equipment. Our collection of vintage images are edited by us to repair damage, improve color quality, size, and prepare for printing. Our source images are at least 600dpi to produce each print as accurate as the original. The resolution we print at is much higher quality than what is shown in previews.Printed with professional inks and paperShips in a sturdy mailer Printed from high resolution scansPlease note, these are reproduction prints of old posters and photographs. Some of the original wear may be present such as: dust marks, scratches, pinholes, or cue marks Please note, due to difference in displays, the actual colors may vary slightly from what you see Shop with Confidence Customer service and satisfaction are our priority. Please contact me if you need any help with your order.Interested in a custom order or different size, paper, or a gallery wrap canvas? Contact me with any requests.

Price: 65 USD

Location: North Tonawanda, New York

End Time: 2024-12-27T21:17:56.000Z

Shipping Cost: 0 USD

Product Images

SET of (14) US National Conservation Land Trails System 50th Posters Print 13x19SET of (14) US National Conservation Land Trails System 50th Posters Print 13x19SET of (14) US National Conservation Land Trails System 50th Posters Print 13x19SET of (14) US National Conservation Land Trails System 50th Posters Print 13x19SET of (14) US National Conservation Land Trails System 50th Posters Print 13x19SET of (14) US National Conservation Land Trails System 50th Posters Print 13x19SET of (14) US National Conservation Land Trails System 50th Posters Print 13x19SET of (14) US National Conservation Land Trails System 50th Posters Print 13x19SET of (14) US National Conservation Land Trails System 50th Posters Print 13x19SET of (14) US National Conservation Land Trails System 50th Posters Print 13x19SET of (14) US National Conservation Land Trails System 50th Posters Print 13x19SET of (14) US National Conservation Land Trails System 50th Posters Print 13x19SET of (14) US National Conservation Land Trails System 50th Posters Print 13x19SET of (14) US National Conservation Land Trails System 50th Posters Print 13x19SET of (14) US National Conservation Land Trails System 50th Posters Print 13x19

Item Specifics

All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted

Artist: US Bureau of Land Management

Unit of Sale: Set

Size: 13x19

Date of Creation: 2000-Now

Region of Origin: New York, USA

Framing: Unframed

Framed/Unframed: Unframed

Listed By: Dealer or Reseller

Year of Production: 2016

Width (Inches): 19

Item Height: 13 in

Style: Vintage

Unit Quantity: 14

Culture: America

Item Width: 19 in

Color: Multi-Color

Material: Matte Paper, Matte Photo Paper

Original/Licensed Reprint: Open Edition Print

Subject: National Parks, USA, National Conservation Land, National Trails, Bureau of Land Management, BLM, National Historic Trail, Travel Poster, Vintage Poster

Signed?: Unsigned

Type: Poster

Size (metric): 330mm x 483mm

Height (Inches): 13

Original/Reproduction: Reproduction

Theme: National Parks

Country/Region of Manufacture: United States

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