Posted inWotr

Hanging loose in Wyoming’s bear country

My friend Fred says that what he enjoys most about camping in the wild is watching people hang their food. Though you’re miles from a television, it’s far funnier than anything Hollywood could invent. And on a recent trip with some friends, Fred and I demonstrated the truth of his theory. The concept is simple: […]

Posted inJuly 7, 2003: Invasion of the rock jocks

Pesticides and frogs – it’s worse than we thought

The article on frogs and pesticides is useful, but incomplete (HCN, 5/26/03: Agriculture exacts a price in the High Sierra). At a recent Rachel Carson Council seminar in Baltimore, Md., two researchers presented their findings. Tyrone Hayes of Berkeley, Calif., found, in both laboratory and field tests, that very low levels of atrazine, a pesticide […]

Posted inJuly 7, 2003: Invasion of the rock jocks

Demolish the dam, sayeth the Lord

Champagne corks popped recently in the office of the Clark Fork Coalition, a Montana environmental group. On April 15, the Environmental Protection Agency sided with the Clark Fork River, calling for the removal of the Milltown Dam and its toxic reservoir, just east of Missoula. “We’re thrilled,” says Tracy Stone-Manning, director of the coalition. “This […]

Posted inJuly 7, 2003: Invasion of the rock jocks

Fire in the West: It’s no simple story

As scientists who have long grappled with the complexities of fire history in the West, we take issue with Ray Ring’s overreaching storyline that the recent spate of stand-replacing forest fires reflects wholly natural processes operating across all Western landscapes (HCN, 5/26/03: A losing battle). Ring further asserts that the main driver of recent crown […]

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