Examples of National Estate in a sentence
Although landscapes with cultural significance are not explicitly described in the NHRA, they are protected under the broad definition of the National Estate (Section 3): Section 3(2)(c) and (d) list “historical settlements and townscapes” and “landscapes and natural features of cultural significance” as part of the National Estate.The examination of historical maps and aerial photographs help us to reconstruct how the cultural landscape has changed over time as is show how humans have used the land.
Parks, Gardens and Special Trees: A Classification and Assessment Method for the Register of the National Estate, Australian Government Publishing Service, Canberra, 1991, with additional reference to Richards, O.
HeritageThat which is inherited and forms part of the National Estate (historical places, objects, fossils as defined by the National Heritage Resources Act 25 of 1999).
Despite the area being on the Register of National Estate for natural values, it is considered that the proposed clearing is low impact and of a small scale and will not significantly impact on the environmental values of the area.
General Communique of National Estate with the series number 336 lays down the methods and principles of designation, estimation and collection of land occupation to be undertaken by the administration in respect of the land properties within the private possession of the treasury.
The marine area surrounding the Houtman Abrolhos Islands was gazetted as an interim listing in the Register on 24 June 1997.The major purpose of the Register of the National Estate is to be an alerting device, so that places of heritage value are not inadvertently or unnecessarily destroyed or degraded.
National Estate Grants Program, A report by Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service.
Each of the arbitrators shall be chosen from a panel of attorneys knowledgeable in the field of business law in accordance with the then current Commercial Arbitration Rules of the American Arbitration Association.
These controls refer to identified places, either on the Heritage Council’s Register of Places, the Register of the National Estate, Classified by the National Trust or and/or places on the “Heritage List” under Part 7 of the Scheme.
The heritage sites are listed on the Register of the National Estate and State Heritage Inventory.