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Emilio Carballido: un viaje en el paisaje mexicano

TOMAS BERNAL ALANIS (2020, [Artículo])

Artículo número 7 de la Sección Tema. 12 páginas. tyvllv

Este artículo es un análisis de la novela corta El tren que corría de Emilio Carballido, donde cinco personajes van a tener una odisea para llegar a Monterrey después que el tren los dejo. En esta aventura expondrán sus deseos e ilusiones a través de los paisajes mexicanos que recorrerán en un taxi para alcanzar el tren, con su viajar se mostrará parte de la geografía y de la historia de diversos paisajes de este México rico en culturas y formas de vida.

This article is an analysis of the short novel El tren que corría of Emilio Carballido, in it, five characters experimented an odyssey before they get to Monterrey, after the train left them. In this adventure they will expose their desires and illusions trough the Mexicans landscapes, which they will travel in a taxicab to reach the train. With their journey it will show part of the geography and history of several Mexican landscapes, full of cultures and lifestyles.

Paisaje, viajar, movimiento, historia. Landscape, travel, movement, history. HUMANIDADES Y CIENCIAS DE LA CONDUCTA CIENCIAS DE LAS ARTES Y LAS LETRAS TEORÍA, ANÁLISIS Y CRÍTICA LITERARIAS

Contrasting spatial patterns in active-fire and fire-suppressed mediterranean climate old-growth mixed conifer forests

Danny L. Fry  (2014, [Artículo])

In Mediterranean environments in western North America, historic fire regimes in frequent-fire conifer forests are highly variable both temporally and spatially. This complexity influenced forest structure and spatial patterns, but some of this diversity has been lost due to anthropogenic disruption of ecosystem processes, including fire. Information from reference forest sites can help management efforts to restore forests conditions that may be more resilient to future changes in disturbance regimes and climate. In this study, we characterize tree spatial patterns using four-ha stem maps from four old-growth, Jeffrey pine-mixed conifer forests, two with active-fire regimes in northwestern Mexico and two that experienced fire exclusion in the southern Sierra Nevada. Most of the trees were in patches, averaging six to 11 trees per patch at 0.007 to 0.014 ha-1, and occupied 27-46% of the study areas. Average canopy gap sizes (0.04 ha) covering 11-20% of the area were not significantly different among sites. The putative main effects of fire exclusion were higher densities of single trees in smaller size classes, larger proportion of trees (≥56%) in large patches (≥10 trees), and decreases in spatial complexity. While a homogenization of forest structure has been a typical result from fire exclusion, some similarities in patch, single tree, and gap attributes were maintained at these sites. These within-stand descriptions provide spatially relevant benchmarks from which to manage for structural heterogeneity in frequent-fire forest types.

article, climate, controlled study, ecosystem fire history, forest structure, geographic distribution, geographic mapping, land use, mathematical computing, mathematical model, Mexico, spatial analysis, taiga, United States, comparative study, conife CIENCIAS AGROPECUARIAS Y BIOTECNOLOGÍA CIENCIAS AGROPECUARIAS Y BIOTECNOLOGÍA