Posted inMarch 15, 1999: Selling off the Promised Land

Green versus gold

California sometimes seems to play in its own league, its affairs completely separate from the rest of the West. But the lively new collection, Green Versus Gold: Sources in California’s Environmental History, shows how universal California’s lessons are. Editor Carolyn Merchant dips into every phase of California’s history, from before Europeans arrived, through Spanish colonization, […]

Posted inNovember 9, 1998: Grizzly war

Erosion danger fans flames

In Washington state, Patricia Hoffman’s community group, Save Our Summers, successfully led the fight to end bluegrass-field burning that was choking the city of Spokane (HCN, 12/22/97). Now she’s launched another air-clearing campaign, this time against wheat-stubble burning. “This is the first year that we haven’t had plumes rising in Spokane County,” Hoffman says. “What […]

Posted inOctober 26, 1998: The Oregon way

Roadless, for now

Colorado environmentalists stopped two roadless-area timber sales last month. A federal judge agreed with a Colorado Environmental Coalition lawsuit when he told the Forest Service that the agency didn’t properly account for the protection of two sensitive species, the northern goshawk and the boreal owl, in preparing the Trout Mountain timber sale on the Rio […]

Posted inOctober 12, 1998: A river becomes a raw nerve

They left only footprints

When storms hit central Wyoming’s Bighorn Basin, dry washes turn to muddy streams, scouring the limestone bedrock. In one gully near the Red Gulch/Alkali Backcountry Byway, the yearly floods uncovered more than 2,000 dinosaur tracks from the Middle Jurassic period. “There were thousands and thousands of small- to medium-sized meat-eating dinosaurs scurrying around here,” explains […]

Posted inOctober 12, 1998: A river becomes a raw nerve

Broadway, mountain-style

Bitter environmental conflict inspires demonstrations, op-ed pieces, sometimes violence. In the Mattole Valley of Northern California, fights over logging and salmon have generated something else entirely: musical comedy. Activist David Simpson and his choreographer wife, Jane Lapiner, both San Francisco Mime Troupe veterans, launched a theater group, Human Nature, to try to ease tensions between […]

Gift this article