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Modern-day scientists, retracing the path of Joseph
Grinnell in Yosemite National Park, document conspicuous changes in
the natural world and find a culprit unimagined by biologists 100
years ago: global warming
by Michelle Nijhuis,
Oct 17, 2005
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Wildlife biologist Erik Beever says that as the climate
warms in the Great Basin, pikas are rapidly disappearing from
mountains where they formerly thrived
by Michelle Nijhuis,
Oct 17, 2005
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Nutria, destructive beaver-like mammals from South
America, are moving into the Skagit River Valley of northwestern
Washington, and some believe a warming climate is to
blame
by Emma Brown,
Oct 31, 2005
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Bill McKibben’s new book, Wandering Home, is a
hopeful account of a leisurely hike across northeastern America, as
relevant to the West as it is to the East
by George Sibley,
Oct 31, 2005
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In Utah, scientists are exploring the site of a long-vanished inland sea called Lake Bonneville to understand the West's past - and future - climate.
by Douglas Fox,
Nov 07, 2011
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A second-generation forest ranger considers how fire prevention and climate change are affecting the forests he once roamed with his father.
by Frank Carroll,
Apr 17, 2012
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Western religious leaders need to speak out more strongly on the dangers of climate change.
by Tim Lydon,
Feb 06, 2011
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Today's activists need to get more involved in protesting the environmental profiteering that is destroying our planet.
by Tim Lydon,
Dec 15, 2011
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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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Two weeks in the very arid West means dry ski slopes,
destructive wildfires, unending drought and unhappy bears; timber
mills are victims of housing collapse; costs of carbon dioxide and
its removal.
by Jonathan Thompson,
Dec 10, 2007