Advisor | Richards, Nathan | |
Author | Duncan, James P. | |
Date Accessioned | 2015-08-24T18:01:00Z | |
Date Available | 2015-08-24T18:01:00Z | |
Date of Issue | 2015 | |
Identifier (URI) | http://hdl.handle.net/10342/5004 | |
Description | This study examined the ways in which NC scuba divers identify sustainable shipwreck diving activities to gain a better understanding of how their behavior impacts sustainable cultural tourism on the coast of North Carolina. The information collected by this study revealed the norms of respondents regarding how human activities affect the sustainability of submerged maritime archaeological sites. This was done by comparing diver characteristic variables in relation to attitudes regarding a multitude of sustainable shipwreck diving activities as they were defined by previous literature (Stone 1996; McCarthy 2000; Jewell 2004; Edney 2006). Results concluded that divers that belong to archaeological organizations tended to define sustainable diving activities as the literature does. The most experienced divers not a member of these groups tend to disagree with the literature when it comes to identifying sustainable diving activities. | |
Extent | 190 p. | |
Format Medium | dissertations, academic | |
Publisher | East Carolina University | |
Subject | Recreation | |
Subject | Tourism | |
Library of Congress Subject Headings | Scuba diving--North Carolina | |
Library of Congress Subject Headings | Scuba divers--North Carolina | |
Library of Congress Subject Headings | Recreational dive industry--North Carolina | |
Library of Congress Subject Headings | Sustainable tourism--North Carolina | |
Library of Congress Subject Headings | Underwater archaeology--North Carolina | |
Library of Congress Subject Headings | Shipwrecks--North Carolina | |
Title | Investigating Scuba Divers' Attitudes To Sustainable Shipwreck Diving In North Carolina | |
Type | Master's Thesis | |
Department | Sustainable Tourism | |
Degree | M.S. | |