From Center for Western Priorities <[email protected]>
Subject Look West: USGS includes Indigenous knowledge in Grand Canyon uranium study
Date February 12, 2024 2:44 PM
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A new report published by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) incorporates Indigenous knowledge to explore potential risks posed by the Pinyon Plain

Look West: Public lands and energy news from the Center for Western Priorities


** USGS includes Indigenous knowledge in Grand Canyon uranium study
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Monday, February 12, 2024
Contaminant exposure framework for uranium mining in the Grand Canyon region from the Havasupai perspective. Photographs by Blake McCord and Dawn Beauty. Source: USGS ([link removed])

A new report ([link removed]) published by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) incorporates Indigenous knowledge to explore potential risks posed by the Pinyon Plain uranium mine in Arizona. The inclusion of Tribal perspectives gives the new report a more complete view of mining impacts than previous analyses. “This report serves as an example for other Tribal and federal managers who want to co-produce similar work,” said report co-author Jo Ellen Hinck ([link removed]) of the USGS. “This work is the culmination of eight years of relationship- and trust-building, and we are proud of the final product.” Hinck co-authored the report with Havasupai Councilwoman Carletta Tilousi.

Journalist Jonathan Thompson explores the report in his newsletter, The Land Desk ([link removed]) . Pinyon Plain mine is located just 10 miles from the Grand Canyon and is within the boundaries of the newly designated Baaj Nwaavjo I’tah Kukveni – Ancestral Footprints of the Grand Canyon National Monument. The mine sits above the Redwall-Muav aquifer and could contaminate groundwater that the Havasupai Tribe relies on. The report also outlines pathways of exposure that are often overlooked, such as gathered medicines, ceremonial plants, and construction materials.

“If the R-Aquifer becomes contaminated, and we must abandon our ancestral home of Supai Village, we will leave the blue-green waters of Havasu Creek behind and consequently will cease to be the Havasuw Baja,” said Havasupai Vice-Chairman Edmond Tilousi in the report ([link removed]) . “While we may still breathe air, we, the People of the Blue Green Water, will have become extinct.”

The mine is permitted to operate within the national monument because Energy Fuels held an existing, valid claim before the monument designation. However, a coalition of conservation and faith groups, Tribes, and scientists ([link removed]) are urging Arizona Governor Katie Hobbs to rescind a state-approved water permit for the mine and are requesting that the Forest Service conduct a new environmental impact statement incorporating updated research and Tribal input.

New podcast episode: Uranium mining returns to the Colorado Plateau

Driven by high uranium prices, domestic uranium mining has resumed at three locations in the U.S. after an eight-year hiatus. In the latest episode of The Landscape ([link removed]) , Kate and Aaron are joined by Amber Reimondo, Energy Director at the Grand Canyon Trust, and Scott Clow, Environmental Programs Director for the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe, to discuss how that will impact the Grand Canyon and Tribal communities on the Colorado Plateau.


** Quick hits
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Wyoming bill would allow governor to limit federal land management authority

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Everyone was happy with the Bears Ears land swap. Here’s why it fell apart anyway

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The planet needs solar power. Can we build it without harming nature?

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How one of the nation’s fastest growing counties plans to find water in the desert

KUNC ([link removed])

With climate change, Colorado River officials peer into muddy future

Washington Post ([link removed])

Opinion: Proposed Mimbres Peaks National Monument would be economic boon for the area

Las Cruces Sun-News ([link removed])

Fisherman convicted of diverting a Michigan river by hand

New York Times ([link removed])

Colorado bill to ban new oil drilling appears headed for legislature

Colorado Sun ([link removed])


** Quote of the day
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” We’re faced with two truths: We have a climate change crisis, but we also have a biodiversity crisis. We have to be mindful that there’s wildlife that are dependent on these habitats, and we have to be smart and thoughtful about how we’re doing this deployment so that we can hold both of those crises at the same time.”

—Meaghan Gade, program manager at the Association of Fish & Wildlife Agencies, New York Times ([link removed])


** Picture This
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@usinterior ([link removed])
Behold, National Park LVIII.

Located between San Francisco and Kansas City, @greatsanddunesnps ([link removed]) in Colorado became America’s 58th national park in 2004.

Just as many fans today are wearing red, the massive dunes and snow-capped peaks look great in red too. When the sun’s angle is low across the vast San Luis Valley, an atmospheric haze bends light waves toward the red spectrum, causing a warm red alpenglow.

Photos by Patrick Myers / NPS

#colorado ([link removed]) #greatsanddunes ([link removed]) #greatsanddunesnationalpark ([link removed]) #publiclands ([link removed])

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