Posted inOctober 17, 2011: A Burning Problem

In national parks, where are all the fossils?

When it was established in 1922, South Dakota’s Fossil Cycad National Monument possessed the world’s most significant beds of fossilized, Cretaceous Age cycads, large, fern-like plants. But management was left to local ranchers, and paleontologists working the site received limited federal support. By the time the state historical society offered to take over in 1955, […]

Posted inOctober 17, 2011: A Burning Problem

Chronicles of the ‘Cowboy Candidate,’ a review of Theodore Roosevelt in the Badlands

Theodore Roosevelt in the Badlands: A Young Politician’s Quest for Recovery in the American WestRoger L. Di Silvestro320 pages, hardcover: $27.Walker Books, 2011. With its obsessive inclusion of seemingly every grouse the future president shot, every letter he wrote, and every meeting he chaired during his stay in the West, Theodore Roosevelt in the Badlands […]

Posted inOctober 17, 2011: A Burning Problem

Good policy and good intentions won’t stop big wildfires

Southwestern wildfires are known to be fast-moving and destructive, but this summer’s conflagrations astonished even veteran observers. On May 29, two cousins abandoned a campfire in a ponderosa pine forest in eastern Arizona. The resulting Wallow Fire, encouraged by dry, windy weather, burned for the next five weeks. It became the largest wildfire in the […]

Posted inOctober 17, 2011: A Burning Problem

Praise for Brad Tyer’s “Lost Opportunity”

Gorgeous article (HCN, 9/19/11). Insightful and sophisticated; layered in scope; ethical and pragmatic; beautifully written. Emily DePrangTucson, Arizona Top-shelf journalism. It’s almost cruel to have to wait a year for the book after reading such astute reporting and beautiful prose. Keila SzpallerMissoula, Montana Phenomenal story. Deeply reported, deeply personal, too. I’d like to see more […]

Posted inHeard Around the West

‘Never again’

WYOMING With the cutting of a ceremonial barbed wire fence, the Heart Mountain Interpretive Learning Center near Cody, Wyo., officially opened Aug. 20. It was a dramatic moment for the more than 250 Japanese Americans who were present: All had been imprisoned there during World War II. A crowd of nearly 1,200 other people joined […]

Posted inSeptember 19, 2011: Redemption

Cody Cortez: A faux-file of the West’s most mysterious writer

As fiercely reclusive as he is enigmatic, Cody Cortez is probably the most compelling Western writer you’ve never heard of. He lives off the grid and loathes the trappings of the literary life, spurning bookstore readings and appearances on National Public Radio. Among devotees, though, the pages of his books-in-progress, especially his memoir-in-the-making, Cowboy Rinpoche, […]

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