Protect Our Public Lands and Rivers

Protect Our Public Lands and Rivers

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The idea of untouched wilderness is at the core of the American experience, offering opportunity for recreation and reflection, sanctuary for wildlife, and protected landscapes as a legacy for future generations. Yet, only 2.5 percent of our federal public land outside of Alaska is given this gold standard of protection—free of roads and industrial development and forever available for hiking, hun

Alaska Tribes Urge Bureau of Land Management to Protect Critical Lands and Waters 11/20/2023

Earlier this year, 78 Alaska Tribes signed a letter to the Bureau of Land Management, asking the federal government to retain current D-1 protections for public lands in the state.

Read below to learn more about the critical importance of D-1 protections, which cover 28 million acres in Alaska.

Alaska Tribes Urge Bureau of Land Management to Protect Critical Lands and Waters The fate of many large landscapes and diverse, intact ecosystems across Alaska could soon be decided by the federal Bureau of Land Management (BLM), which will identify which ancestral lands will remain protected from some forms of mining.

11/01/2023

Some beautiful art to celebrate Nevada Day!

Read more below on the artist from our friends at the Friends of Nevada Wilderness.

Happy Nevada Day - from the britslecones of Mt. Charleston and sandstone hoodoos of Gold Butte to the sagebrush sea of the Sheldon and the alpine lakes of the Ruby Mountains, our beautiful state has so much to celebrate!

In honor of this very special day, check out Valerie Cohen's "Nevada's Trees Call Out to Us," a tribute to the flora of the Silver State: www.nevadahumanities.org/blog/2023/9/13/nevadas-trees-call-out-to-us

WSDOT camera catches family of elk playing in snow on I-90 wildlife bridge 10/28/2023

Snow is starting to fall in parts of the west—and here's a cute video of elk playing on a wildlife crossing in Washington State:

WSDOT camera catches family of elk playing in snow on I-90 wildlife bridge Biologists observed a family of elk frolicking in the snow on the I-90 wildlife crossing Wednesday morning.

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