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Both Indians and whites battle diabetes on the Klamath watershed, where dam building ended the salmon runs that once kept the First People alive.
by Diana Hartel,
May 24, 2011
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A flurry of end-of-year easements saves lots of lovely
landscapes; heli-skiing wins in Utah; snow-lovers help starving
Colorado deer; a possible ceasefire on the Klamath; and bark
beetles are destroying Colorado’s lodgepole pines.
by Jodi Peterson,
Feb 04, 2008
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In most of the West’s complicated environmental
problems, so-called “unlikely alliances” between greens
and their opposite numbers are really not that unlikely after
all.
by Jonathan Thompson,
Jun 23, 2008
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Only the federal government can find away to protect both
salmon and farmers in the Northwest’s Klamath River
watershed
by Tim Holt,
Sep 13, 2004
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Union of Concerned Scientists talks to concerned Fish and
Wildlife Service employees; Mexican wolf reintroduction upheld in
Southwest; 2002 Klamath fish kill means fewer salmon to catch and
eat in future
by Laura Paskus,
Mar 07, 2005
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Mexican wolf dies during checkup; another fish kill on the
Klamath; Bush nominates H. Dale Hall to be new head of U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service
by Laura Paskus,
Aug 08, 2005
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Fish, not dams, deserve priority.
by Leonard Masten,
Dec 04, 2012
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Farmers, environmentalists, fishermen and tribes are
talking with PacifiCorp officials about the possible removal of
four dams on the Klamath River
by Brett Wilkison,
Apr 17, 2006
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In Upstream: Sons, Fathers, and Rivers,
Robin Carey recounts a kayak journey up the Klamath River that he
made with his son, Dev, and on the way explores the Careys’
troubled family history
by Jim Dean,
Nov 27, 2006
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Federal wildlife managers admit that the massive fish kill
in the Klamath River in 2002 was caused, in part, by the diversion
of water to farmers
by Michael Milstein,
Dec 08, 2003