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Meteorologist Hal Klieforth has collected a lifetime of knowledge – and a museum’s worth of artifacts – from years spent exploring the Sierra Nevada.
by Terray Sylvester ,
Apr 28, 2009
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We will need humility as well as technology to triumph over climate change.
by Allen Best,
Mar 30, 2010
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Westerners have a knack for new and innovative thinking, as this special issue of HCN shows.
by Ray Ring, Tom Beal, Emily Underwood, Terray Sylvester, Sarah Gilman,
Mar 09, 2009
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In Chrysalis: Maria Sibylla Merian and the Secrets of
Metamorphosis, Kim Todd uncovers the life and legacy of a
pioneering 17th century woman
by Michelle Nijhuis,
Jan 21, 2008
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On the drought-stricken Navajo Nation, scientist Margaret
Hiza Redsteer studies the movement of sand dunes.
by Michelle Nijhuis,
Jun 23, 2008
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Educator Michael Ceballos breaks down the barriers keeping young Native Americans from careers in science.
by Erica Gies,
May 11, 2011
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Natural history teaches us how rapidly and irrevocably the world can change -- a fact we should bear in mind as we enter the new, human-dominated era some scientists call the Anthropocene.
by Stephen Trimble,
May 31, 2012
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In Of Rock and Rivers, Ellen Wohl, a geomorphologist, reads the story behind the Western landscape.
by Valerie Rapp,
Nov 22, 2009
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The hurricanes in the Gulf and New Mexico’s endless
drought lead the author to wonder why it is human beings refuse to
take nature seriously
by Laura Paskus,
Feb 20, 2006
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Faced with rising temperatures and a passive federal
government, Western towns such as Aspen, Colo., are beginning to
work out a local approach to combating global warming
by Michelle Nijhuis,
Mar 06, 2006