PHOTOS FROM THE FIELD: Week of August 24 – 28, 2020

PHOTOS FROM THE FIELD

NPR—To Manage Wildfire, California Looks To What Tribes Have Known All Along
The arrival of Western settlers dramatically changed the fire regime.
“They came with their concepts of being afraid of fire,” Goode says. “They didn’t understand fire in the sense of the tool that it could be to create and what it did to help generate and rejuvenate the land. So they brought in suppression.”
“We don’t put fire on the ground and not know how it’s going to turn out,” Ron Goode, tribal chairman of the North Fork Mono, tells the group. “That’s what makes it cultural burning, because we cultivate.”

Photos from the Field: Ron Goode, tribal chairman of the North Fork Mono, looks on as sourberry bushes burn. After the bushes are burned in the winter, they sprout again in the spring. Photo credit: Lauren Sommer/NPR

 

2020-08-26T17:30:10+00:00August 26th, 2020|PHOTOS FROM THE FIELD|

PHOTOS FROM THE FIELD: Week of August 17 – 21, 2020

PHOTOS FROM THE FIELD

NY Times—Trump Administration Finalizes Plan to Open Arctic Refuge to Drilling

The decision sets up a fierce legal battle over the fate of a vast, remote area that is home to polar bears, caribou and the promise of oil wealth.

Photo credit: Christopher Miller for The New York Times)

 

2020-08-19T18:08:27+00:00August 19th, 2020|PHOTOS FROM THE FIELD|

NATIONAL TRIBAL AIR ASSOCIATION

Our mission is to advance air quality management policies and programs, consistent with the needs, interests, and unique legal status of American Indian Tribes and Alaska Natives.

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