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PrefaceIntactness, i.e. the absence of human disturbance, is a quality of a natural landscape that cannot be artificially restored. Large intact forest landscapes (also called frontier forests) are quickly becoming a rarity in most parts of the world (Bryant, Nielsen, and Tangley, 1997). Perhaps surprisingly, the extent and boundaries of these areas are poorly known. Myths still abound, such as the widespread romantic notion of the northern taiga forest and the tropical rainforest as virtually endless wilderness areas, intact, unbroken, unpopulated.Identifying and describing remaining intact forest landscapes is a difficult but urgent task. It is urgent, because industrial land use is expanding rapidly. It is difficult, because these landscapes are large, inaccessible and poorly known. The work must be sufficiently rapid, accurate, and detailed to allow timely and well-informed decisions about their protection and use. This atlas is the world’s first rigorous attempt at mapping intact forest landscapes to affect decision making. Produced in Russia as part of the Global Forest Watch initiative, it is a pioneer work in many ways. And, as with all pioneer efforts, it has had many problems to overcome. A suitable method had to be designed. People had to be trained to carry out analysis and field work. Satellite images and ancillary information had to be acquired, analyzed, and eventually archived in a broadly accessible way. Finally, the result had to be presented in an informative and user friendly way. Deficiencies no doubt remain. The atlas should not be seen as the last word on this topic, but as the first. It is our hope that the forestry and conservation communities will contribute the necessary resources to refine this work and expand it to mapping of other values that warrant special precaution in forest management. The emergence of an atlas of this kind in Russia should not come as a surprise. Russia has an older tradition than most countries in forest science, mapping, and remote sensing. Russia has also retained the largest amount of intact forest landscapes in the world. What might be surprising is that the atlas is the result of a country-wide non-governmental initiative. In that sense, too, it is a pioneer work. We are convinced that this atlas will address several at least two important needs: the need of the public to know the ecological condition of Russia’s forest lands, and the need of the decision maker to have accurate, relevant and accessible information at hand. It is with great pleasure that we recommend this atlas to the reader.
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