We consider the pros and cons of hunting bison just outside Yellowstone, and why Newtok, Alaska’s residents have had to wait decades to relocate while climate change destroys their village. HCN and ProPublica’s four-part package reveals how Colorado River Basin tribes in Arizona - including the Navajo, Chemehuevi, Hopi and Tohono O’odham - must fight for every drop of the water they were guaranteed by a 1908 Supreme Court decision. This month, we take an in-depth look at life in Indian Country. Finally, we share the joy of late-summer salmon fishing in Alaska. Denver once bragged about being a “sanctuary city” what happened? The Japanese American National Museum honors those who were incarcerated during World War II, and historians remember the hardworking children of Southern California’s Filipino immigrant farmers. Can golf survive in the desert? Indian law experts discuss the Supreme Court’s ruling upholding the Indian Child Welfare Act. Can outdoor recreation adapt to our changing climate, and why do so many white supremacists want to secede from Oregon? Elsewhere, we examine the 1872 law that governs hardrock mining, study the “forever chemicals” polluting our water, and learn how captive-born Mexican wolves are fostered in the wild. Kylie Mohr follows two hikers who were caught in a Northern Cascades wildfire, while Leah Sottile looks at the “Greater Idaho” movement. ![]() ![]() This month, HCN heats up with two very different fires: A genuine backcountry inferno, and the kind of political blaze that smolders and periodically threatens to blow up.
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