How do you explain what it is like to be able to walk five miles in any direction from town and find a rubble mound or masonry ruin? Download entire issue to view this article: http://www.hcn.org/issues/20.15/download-entire-issue
Growing up among the ruins in Blanding, Utah
Water marketing is becoming respectable
Water marketing is increasing because of the rising cost of water and public resistance to dams. Download entire issue to view this article: http://www.hcn.org/issues/20.14/download-entire-issue
Rangers are dangerous: Do not annoy or feed them
This is a practical survival guide to the national parks, with down-to-earth advice on how to co-exist with park rangers. Download entire issue to view this article: http://www.hcn.org/issues/20.14/download-entire-issue
City slickers strike it rich in South Dakota
A plan to invigorate the state’s economy by taking sewage ash from the Twin Cities backfires. Download entire issue to view this article: http://www.hcn.org/issues/20.14/download-entire-issue
O’Toole is the Adam Smith of forest economics
O’Toole has done all of us, including the Forest Service, a great favor. His genius and hard work have shown us that the national forests are governed by a welter of laws whose purpose and workings are exactly the same as those of the 1872 Mining Law. Download entire issue to view this article: http://www.hcn.org/issues/20.13/download-entire-issue
Rhythms of the forest
We need to expand our view of time, give natural events more space and look for the heartbeats that keep it all running. Download entire issue to view this article: http://www.hcn.org/issues/20.13/download-entire-issue
Can nuclear waste be salted away?
All is not well with the nation’s first planned nuclear-waste dump, the Waste Isolation Pilot Project. Download entire issue to view this article: http://www.hcn.org/issues/20.13/download-entire-issue
Wyoming elk antlers head for the Orient
During its 20-year history, the annual Boy Scout Elk Antler Auction, held each spring in Jackson, Wyo., has slowly become dominated by antler traders from the Orient who export the horns to Korea and transform them into wafer-sized aphrodisiacs or medicinal teas. Download entire issue to view this article: http://www.hcn.org/issues/20.12/download-entire-issue
Will Wyoming’s Clark Fork remain wild?
Proposals to designate the river as “wild and scenic” run into lingering proposals for dams. Download entire issue to view this article: http://www.hcn.org/issues/20.12/download-entire-issue
Parks are increasingly vulnerable
Like lines drawn in the sand, the borders of America’s national parks have not prevented the crowding and shoving of neighboring public and private landowners. Download entire issue to view this article: http://www.hcn.org/issues/20.12/download-entire-issue
The U.S. has spent a century chiseling away Crow land
The Crow have been one of the more flexible tribes in adapting to the ways of the dominant culture. But tribal leaders fear their easygoing ways may cost Crow children their ancestral ground. Download entire issue to view this article: http://www.hcn.org/issues/20.11/download-entire-issue
Ranchers may be losing the war of the myths
The traditional view of the West and its wild rangeland is changing. No longer are conservationists and environmentalists a fringe interest group. Download entire issue to view this article: http://www.hcn.org/issues/20.11/download-entire-issue
Will the Crow Tribe dribble away $29 million in coal tax money?
A ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court opens up an old account and allows the tribe to set its own coal tax rates. Download entire issue to view this article: http://www.hcn.org/issues/20.11/download-entire-issue
Phoenix and LA cast long shadows
Petrified Forest-Painted Desert National Park in northeastern Arizona is about 200 miles and a mountain range away from Phoenix, Ariz. But Phoenix, with help from even more distant Los Angeles, is the primary cause of air pollution at the park. Download entire issue to view this article: http://www.hcn.org/issues/20.10/download-entire-issue
The fight for rowing room in the Grand Canyon
One of the fastest growing and most lucrative sports in the West is river running, and river runners who once rafted at will now run on restricted launch dates and compete for access. Download entire issue to view this article: http://www.hcn.org/issues/20.10/download-entire-issue
How do you combine birds and bombs?
Along Idaho’s Snake River, military war-games run up against the densest known concentration of nesting raptors in the world. Download entire issue to view this article: http://www.hcn.org/issues/20.10/download-entire-issue
Two Forks will unite Colorado
From the outside, to a casual observer, Two Forks is inexplicable. From the inside, Two Forks is the only solution to the Denver metro area’s — and the West’s — dilemma that existing leadership can conceive of. Understand Two Forks, and understand the West. Download entire issue to view this article: http://www.hcn.org/issues/20.9/download-entire-issue
Two Forks will reach far into Nebraska
Two Forks pits the one million wings along the Platte River against a little more than a million acre-feet of water storage. Download entire issue to view this article: http://www.hcn.org/issues/20.9/download-entire-issue
Two Forks Dam: Push comes to shove
When the dust settles a year or so from now, it is likely that the struggle over the proposed Two Forks Dam on the Front Range of Colorado will rank with the fights to stop the damming of the Grand Canyon and to halt the construction of the huge coal-fired power plant once proposed for […]
Hurling sand into society’s gears
Earth First! was born in the spring of 1980. Between tequila and beers and camping beneath the stars in the desert near a tiny Mexican border town, four men dedicated to the preservation of biological diversity hatched the notion of a group that was part Sierra Club, part Hell’s Angels, part Yippie. Download entire issue […]
