@misc{Łotysz_Sławomir_Cmentarzysko, author={Łotysz, Sławomir}, howpublished={online}, publisher={Zielona Góra: Oficyna Wydawnicza Uniwersytetu Zielonogórskiego}, language={pol}, language={eng}, abstract={After the WWI, the US navy had several hundreds of redundant transport ships, mainly wooden hulk steamers. In 1925 they were transferred to Mallows Bay on Potomac River, 30 miles south of Washington, DC, and ordered to be burned down. Some unburned remains of the hulks have been disfiguring the bay since.}, abstract={After several decades and numerous attempts to clean the affected portion of the river, it was found out, that the post-military relics do not obstruct the navigation as it was stated, and moreover they became a part of environment. Today the hulks form dozens of strange shaped islands, covered with plants, which serve as a sanctuary for birds. The colonies of cranes and several nests of American bald eagle have been noted.}, type={artykuł}, title={Cmentarzysko okrętów cennym obiektem przyrodniczym = A ship graveyard as natural sanctuary}, keywords={renaturalizacja, dziedzictwo poprzemysłowe, architektura krajobrazu, reclaiming by nature, landscape architecture, river, industrial heritage}, }