National Parks

America's National Parks: Canaries in the Climate Change Coal Mine

America's National Parks: Canaries in the Climate Change Coal Mine

"The house of America is founded upon our land and if we keep that whole, then the storm can rage, but the house will stand forever." – President Lyndon B. Johnson

Despite the easy association of American culture with prosperity and modernity, historically, it was America’s National parks that were seen as a reflection of national character, as well as national priorities.

Travel to America’s National Parks, and you are quickly reminded that it is not our wealth, not our cars, not our designer boutiques, our high rise buildings or our suburban homes that define America. Rather, as so many have said, it is these parks that are the crown jewels of our country.

I was reminded of this over the last two weeks as I hiked through the lunar landscape of Utah’s Capitol Reef National Park and the pine forests, streams and crystal blue lakes of California’s Yosemite National Park.

But I also learned something new and disturbing: All is not well in America's National Parks, where the impacts of climate change are already apparent, not only where I hiked, but in parks all across the nation.

Hayduke Lives: Tim DeChristopher’s Heroic Act of Creative Civil Disobedience

Hayduke Lives: Tim DeChristopher’s Heroic Act of Creative Civil Disobedience

University of Utah student, Tim DeChristopher arrived at the BLM building in Salt Lake City last Friday intending to join some 200 other people protesting the Bush administration’s decision to auction oil and gas rights on federal lands near some of our most iconic national parks. Then he had one of those profound insights that change people’s lives forever.

As Tim put it in his online statement:

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