August 31, 1998: Excavating Ecotopia

Washington’s Okanogan County is divided between those who support Battle Mountain Gold’s planned Buckhorn Mtn. mine for its economic promise, and local and Native American activists fighting what they see as impending ecological disaster.

August 17, 1998: Living out the trailer dream

One in six Westerners now lives in a trailer, but this traditionally affordable housing can become an expensive trap, as tougher zoning pushes trailers into crowded parks with ever-increasing rents and regulations.

August 3, 1998: Tribes reclaim stolen lands

Using legal and financial savvy and the latest computer technology, Indian tribes across the West are taking control of tribal lands that have been in the hands of the federal government and, often, non-Indian farmers for the last century.

June 8, 1998: Don’t fence me in

Bison have made a remarkable recovery from near extinction a century ago, but now the animal’s growing popularity as livestock raises questions about whether it can remain a “wild” animal.

May 25, 1998: Tackling tamarisk

The exotic woody shrub known as tamarisk or saltcedar has infested the West’s river systems, but scientists are divided over how to fight it, or whether it is even possible to do so in a degraded landscape.

February 16, 1998: Private rights vs. public lands

A ranching family’s desire to develop a road to an inholding in Arizona’s Arrastra Mounain Wilderness is a microcosm of the huge and unwieldy problem of inholdings on public lands throughout the West.

January 19, 1998: After the gold rush

The reclamation of Montana’s hardrock mines will cost billions, and is complicated by the fact that no one really knows how to do it, or who should foot the bill.

November 10, 1997: Drain Lake Powell? Democracy and science finally come West

The proposal to drain Lake Powell is exhilarating because of the debate it will inspire: A careful study of the history of the Colorado River Basin and Glen Canyon Dam reveals that the hated dam may have had some good consequences, while those who remember and still mourn for drowned Glen Canyon find new allies in the fight to destroy the dam and restore the canyon.

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