Are they the Wilderness advocates who give freely from their lives to save the last remnants of American Wilderness? Or are they the protesters who flex every political muscle to prevent any more Wilderness and are now hoping to violate already-designated Wilderness. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/12.20/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
Archive
Catlin took his palette West to paint Indians
By steamboat, canoe, horse and sometimes staggering fever-ridden on his own two legs, George Catlin covered thousands of miles along the Missouri River and Rocky Mountains. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/12.19/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
Tampering with the elements: success or failure?
The issue of who is legally responsible if something goes awry when cloud seeders and other weather changers are at work is unresolved in Colorado and elsewhere. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/12.19/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
Tanker port and pipeline path pain Puget Sound opponents
The proposed Northern Tier Pipeline would carry up to 900,000 barrels of oil a day from a tanker port on Washington’s Puget Sound through Idaho, Montana and North Dakota, terminating at a refinery in Clearbrook, Minn. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/12.19/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
A Western tradition ends with a conference on America’s parks
A report on the Institute of the American West’s conference, Parks in the West and American Culture. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/16.18/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
Budding bureaucracy copes with crowds, confusion and conflicts
As wilderness recreation becomes more popular, land management agencies are creating permit systems and other systems for dealing with the increased visitation. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/12.18/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
Coal tax fuels the search for alternative energy in Montana
Since 1975, Montana has funded 145 renewable energy projects — including solar, hydro, biomass and geothermal — with money from the state’s coal severance tax. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/12.18/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
Dinosaur dynamos?
The Bureau of Land Management says that energy conservation and renewable energy sources could produce twice as much power as the Allen-Warner power plants proposed for Utah and Nevada. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/12.18/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
Ailing uranium millworkers seek recognition, aid
Millworkers helped produce uranium for the nation’s nuclear defense program in the 1950s and ’60s. Now many are ill from exposure to radiation, but getting compensation is difficult. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/12.17/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
Crested Butte water ordinance immersed in AMAX court challenge
Less than a month after Crested Butte, Colo., passed an ordinance aimed at protecting its watershed, city leaders find themselves face to face in court with AMAX, the mining giant that hopes to extract molybdenum nearby. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/12.17/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
Schools’ refusal to burn coal has local miners heated up
In a break with tradition, the school district in one of western Colorado’s most productive coal regions is building seven new schools, all of them to be heated with natural gas, an imported commodity. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/12.17/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
Solar pioneer persists, without federal handout
Zomeworks Corporation, one of the nation’s earliest solar energy companies, strives to develop and manufacture inexpensive items which pay for themselves, and does not take government grants. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/12.16/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
The silent generator’s costs come down to earth
Today solar electricity is running, among other things, a remote refrigerator, a radio repeater, a national park building and a backwoods out-house in the Rocky Mountain states. Six years from now, the U.S. Department of Energy predicts that solar cells will be cheap enough even for the average biscuit baker. Download entire issue to view […]
ASARCO drillers and grizzly share Cabinets
ASARCO recently began its second season here of drilling for copper and silver ore samples in the Cabinet Mountains of northwest Montana, an area designated as wilderness and home to grizzly bears. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/12.15/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
Squeezing the daylights out of Zion
The author reflects on childhood visits to Utah, the history of the Mormons and the National Miners Union, and the state’s perhaps bleak future. To read this article, click the “View a PDF from the original” link below, or download entire issue: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/12.15/download-entire-issue This article appeared in the print edition of the magazine with the […]
Synfuel stakes prove too high for ARCO
The on-again, off-again relationship between the Atlantic Richfield Corporation and the oil shale industry is finally off — and this time possibly for good. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/12.15/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
John Peavey: a maverick changes stripes
John Peavy, a former state senator who now runs a 250,000 acre sheep and cattle operation in southern Idaho, is now running for that office on an environmental platform. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/12.14/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
States, courts, cutbacks put pressure on strip mine agency
Even as strip mines multiply throughout the Rocky Mountain states, the federal agency responsible for overseeing reclamation of mined lands — the Office of Surface Mining — is reeling under a series of blows. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/12.14/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
Would new Montana air rules close smelters?
Tough new ambient air quality standards proposed for Montana have been sidetracked by last-minute questions over the effect they might have on Anaconda Co.’s copper smelters. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/12.14/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
Mining mishap could spell future trouble
Public officials’ response to a spill of toxic water at the Alumet phosphate mine is stoking criticism of the expanding phosphate industry in southeastern Idaho. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/12.13/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
