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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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Whistleblower Earle Dixon’s complaint denied;
Colorado moose has chronic wasting disease; Colorado wind power
gets cheaper than traditional electricity; court nixes
BuRec’s 10-year Klamath River plan
by Matt Jenkins,
Oct 31, 2005
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Two recent guidebooks – Mike Coltrin’s
Sandia Mountain Hiking Guide and The
Field Guide to the Sandia Mountains by Robert Julyan and
Mary Stuever – are excellent guides to the trails and
histories of the mountains outside Albuquerque
by Laura Paskus,
Oct 31, 2005
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Werner Herzog’s new documentary, Grizzly
Man, takes a thoughtful look at the life and death of
Timothy Treadwell, an amateur bear biologist who was killed and
eaten by an Alaskan grizzly
by John Krist,
Nov 28, 2005
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We seldom notice the animals killed by today's fast-moving cars, unless we're traveling slowly, on a bicycle.
by Tom Carter,
Sep 01, 2011
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Quagga mussels hit the jackpot in Nevada; Lakes Mead and
Powell are in trouble; lots and lots and lots of snow – and a
few ambitious ski resorts; and Colorado is building a vegetated
overpass for wildlife on I-70.
by Jonathan Thompson,
Mar 03, 2008
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In The Animal Dialogues, Colorado author Craig Childs
writes of chance encounters with wild animals.
by Sarah Gilman,
Mar 17, 2008
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Will Rounds, who was once a very squeamish vegetarian,
describes hacking apart the body of an elk to feed wolves at
Mission:Wolf.
by Will Rounds,
Apr 28, 2008
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Jeff Welsch decries the “ungulate welfare” on
display in the overcrowded winter feeding grounds of
Wyoming’s National Elk Refuge.
by Jeff Welsch,
May 26, 2008
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Washington state wildlife officials just released the
first batch of endangered Columbia Basin pygmy rabbits back to the
wild.
by Michelle Blank,
Mar 21, 2007