Posted inSeptember 15, 1997: Yellowstone at 125: The park as a sovereign state

New facts about old fish

They have weathered volcanic eruptions and landslides, seen woolly mammoths come and go and outlived the dinosaurs. Now the Pacific Northwest’s white sturgeon are enduring the scrutiny of scientists who want to understand more about North America’s largest fish. The scientists working for Washington and Oregon have been tagging white sturgeon in the Columbia River […]

Posted inSeptember 15, 1997: Yellowstone at 125: The park as a sovereign state

Rid-a-Bird works too well

Rid-a-Bird, a two-man company in Wilton, Iowa, has been killing unwanted birds for over 40 years with the Environmental Protection Agency’s approval. But two dead raptors in Washington have called into question the company’s method of pest control. Rid-a-Bird’s product lures birds to a perch containing fenthion, a fatal nerve poison which paralyzes them. The […]

Posted inSeptember 15, 1997: Yellowstone at 125: The park as a sovereign state

Maps may save lives

Participants in an Oregon mapping project want to keep history from repeating itself. When five people were killed by landslides that hit their homes or cars in 1996, many observers blamed logging of steep slopes above the houses and highways. They said the Oregon Department of Forestry should have prevented the situation (HCN, 12/23/96). Defending […]

Posted inSeptember 15, 1997: Yellowstone at 125: The park as a sovereign state

The Wayward West

They wanted to understand the real West, so they came to watch explosives blow up at an open pit copper mine and to fly over logged forests. Their conclusion: Environmentalists grossly exaggerate the land’s plight; the West is in pretty good shape. The group included about 20 House Republicans, including the three highest-ranking, Speaker Newt […]

Posted inSeptember 15, 1997: Yellowstone at 125: The park as a sovereign state

Heavy metals move

Heavy metals accumulated from 100 years of mining in Idaho’s Silver Valley (HCN, 11/25/96) are spreading into Washington state, and environmentalists and state officials there want a say in how to stop it. “Just having Idaho control the cleanup doesn’t hold any promise,” said Michele Nanni of the Inland Empire Public Lands Council. Last year, […]

Posted inSeptember 15, 1997: Yellowstone at 125: The park as a sovereign state

Keep America green: Hire an illegal alien

From 1975 to 1987, I inspected tree planting in the Klamath National Forest on the Oregon-California border. So I had to laugh a while ago at a quote in a newspaper story about illegal aliens apprehended while planting trees in the Boise National Forest here in Idaho. “The Forest Service does not knowingly hire contractors […]

Posted inSeptember 15, 1997: Yellowstone at 125: The park as a sovereign state

The buffalo underground: Now it can be told

WEST YELLOWSTONE, Mont. – Shortly after last New Year’s Day, Vickie Dyar’s cat started acting strangely. When the gift-store owner stepped into the frigid air to investigate, she saw deep tracks leading through the deep snow toward a small barn near the house. As Dyar walked toward the barn, a bison, its magnificent black head […]

Posted inSeptember 15, 1997: Yellowstone at 125: The park as a sovereign state

Is nature running too wild in Yellowstone?

It’s June 5, and spring is hitting hard in Montana’s Paradise Valley. The Yellowstone River is over its banks. Water the color of creamed coffee washes around streamside cottonwoods and drowns fence posts. Storm clouds over the snow-heavy high country mean there’s more on the way. I’m riding shotgun with Richard Keigley, an ecologist with […]

Posted inSeptember 15, 1997: Yellowstone at 125: The park as a sovereign state

Agencies dunk endangered songbird

ROOSEVELT LAKE, Ariz. – A tall stand of Asian salt-cedars next to a man-made reservoir is the last place anyone would expect to find colonies of one of America’s most endangered bird species. But that’s exactly where several southwestern willow flycatchers were flitting on a warm mid-June afternoon. Less than six inches tall and pale […]

Posted inSeptember 15, 1997: Yellowstone at 125: The park as a sovereign state

Bigger might be better for Utah’s parks

Lockhart Basin isn’t part of southern Utah’s Canyonlands National Park, but activists and park managers are saying it should be. Just outside the park’s eastern boundaries, the basin will soon be home to a drilling rig from Legacy Energy Corp., which has a permit from the Bureau of Land Management to explore for oil. Opponents […]

Posted inSeptember 15, 1997: Yellowstone at 125: The park as a sovereign state

For sale: a Colorado water district – maybe

COLLBRAN, Colo. – At first, it seemed simple: The federal government would sell its small irrigation projects to the local water conservancy districts that use them. The idea sprang from Vice President Al Gore’s mandate to reduce federal bureaucracy. But officials in three Western states are learning that purchases can turn nasty when they go […]

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