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High Country News

High Country News

A nonprofit independent magazine of unblinking journalism that shines a light on all of the complexities of the West.

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Rivers & Lakes

Posted inArticles

After losing his sight, the Tijuana River Estuary offered other ways to see

by Kori Suzuki August 20, 2024August 19, 2024

Ron Peterson, a volunteer at the estuary, now leads nature walks presenting a unique way to experience the wetlands.

Posted inArticles

When the dams come down, what happens to barge traffic?

by Kim Cross July 29, 2024August 8, 2024

Farmers and transportation experts are figuring out how to transport goods if the lower Snake River dams are removed.

Posted inArticles

In an era of dam removal, California is building more

by Theo Whitcomb July 12, 2024August 8, 2024

Proponents say a new reservoir off the Sacramento River is environmentally friendly.

Wilson’s phalaropes eating brine flies at the Great Salt Lake.
Posted inJuly 2024

Wilson’s phalarope to the rescue

by Caroline Tracey July 1, 2024July 5, 2024

A new Endangered Species Act petition could trigger major conservation actions to save the West’s saline lakes.

Solar panels sit on top of buildings and homes in Lapwai, Idaho.
Posted inJuly 2024

How the Nez Perce are using an energy transition to save salmon

by Emily Senkosky July 1, 2024June 28, 2024

The tribe is working to replace the generating capacity of the Lower Snake River dams with solar power.

Teck Coal’s Fording River coal mine in British Columbia at the headwaters of the Elk and Kootenai River watersheds.
Posted inJuly 2024

Pollution knows no borders

by Kylie Mohr July 1, 2024June 28, 2024

A long-awaited agreement will address Canadian mine waste flowing downriver into Montana
and Idaho.

Posted inArticles

What’s next for Willamette Falls?

by Nika Bartoo-Smith June 18, 2024August 8, 2024

The Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde move the second largest waterfall toward public access.

Posted inJune 2024: The Idea of Wilderness

Learning how to live and die with long COVID

by Miles W. Griffis June 1, 2024May 31, 2024

The late artist David Wojnarowicz’s work has brought me back from the dead.

A view over Iron Gate Dam outside of Hornbrook, California, in February. The reservoir’s water level has continued to fall since drawdown began in January.
Posted inMay 2024: A River Returns

Undamming the Klamath

by Nika Bartoo-Smith May 2, 2024May 2, 2024

Tribal nations are restoring the river while reclaiming and revitalizing their cultural heritage.

Larry Alameda (Yurok), left, and Javon Mitchell (Karuk) collect water samples as part of the tribes’ work to monitor water quality after the removal of the Klamath dams.
Posted inMay 2024: A River Returns

Scientists are tracking ecological changes as the Klamath River dams come down

by Juliet Grable May 1, 2024April 30, 2024

A giant sediment pulse — millions of cubic yards of silt, clay and dead algae — trapped for decades behind the dams is now flowing downstream.

Posted inArticles

Are the Great Salt Lake scientists all right?

by Brooke Larsen April 24, 2024August 8, 2024

A Q&A with Great Salt Lake Institute Director Bonnie Baxter on studying a dying lake.

Scene through end of a pipe.
Posted inArticles

Fixing culverts can save migratory fish

by Ben Goldfarb March 27, 2024March 27, 2024

A billion-dollar program is unblocking millions of killer culverts across the nation to help fish get to spawning grounds.

Posted inArticles

A cartography of loss in the Borderlands

by Caroline Tracey February 21, 2024March 11, 2024

Mexicali’s Colorado River Family Album documents what is no more.

Posted inArticles

Wild ice: A training ground for rural skaters

by Luna Anna Archey February 8, 2024April 24, 2024

On the Western Slope of Colorado, frozen reservoirs and rivers offer interesting terrain for skating.

Posted inJanuary 1, 2024: January 2024

Defending the Tijuana Estuary

by Ruxandra Guidi January 1, 2024April 22, 2024

Stewardship saved a Southern California estuary from development. Climate change is the next challenge.

A view of Marble Canyon and the Vermillion Cliffs from above the Kaibab Plateau shows the northeastern parcel of the newly designated Avi Baaj Nwaavjo I’tah Kukveni-Ancestral Footprints of the Grand Canyon.
Posted inArticles

2023 in Native environmental news

by Anna V. Smith and Shana Lombard December 27, 2023January 31, 2024

The beat’s biggest news that you might have missed.

The Glen Canyon Dam sits on the Colorado River, backed by Lake Powell. In 2022, the dam neared deadpool conditions due  to climate change-induced drought and increasing water demand.
Posted inArticles

Remove dams to fight the climate crisis

by Gary Wockner December 19, 2023January 31, 2024

Ten reasons bringing down these barriers are key for mitigation and adaptation.

The author casts for trout with this tenkara rod on a creek in southcentral Alaska.
Posted inArticles

An angler goes ever farther upstream with tenkara

by Matthew Komatsu December 4, 2023January 31, 2024

How a centuries-old Japanese method of fly-fishing awoke a strong connection to hāfu lineage.

Posted inDecember 1, 2023: December 2023

Take a toxic tour of the Great Salt Lake

by Brooke Larsen December 1, 2023January 31, 2024

Utah grapples with its future of industry around its dying inland sea.

A harmful algae bloom in Utah Lake in 2016. The bloom sickened more than 100 people and left farmers scrambling for clean water.
Posted inArticles

Another gunky, toxic season for Utah waters

by Guananí Gómez-Van Cortright November 9, 2023March 11, 2024

Harmful algae blooms, fueled by warming temperatures and nutrient runoff, plague the state.

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