To protect their longstanding wocus gathering tradition and the habitat it depends on, the Klamath Tribes have advocated for projects that restore the wetlands that used to dominate the Southern ...
Ducks Unlimited, the Klamath Tribes, and U.S. Fish and Wildlife ... The massive berm will help prevent erosion, allowing marsh vegetation to establish and keeping the water clear.
and frost is still clinging to the marsh grasses on this cold, sunny January day. Even so, a small crowd has made the trip to watch excavators punch a hole in the levee separating the lake from the ...
re-connecting 14,000 acres of wetland habitat to Upper Klamath Lake. It’s a long, bumpy ride in a mud-crusted ATV to the western shore of Agency Lake, and frost is still clinging to the marsh ...
PacifiCorp has waged a campaign, in the courts and now in the halls of the state Capitol, to reduce its financial obligation.
After deadly utility-caused fires in Washington, Utah and, most recently, Hawaii, officials in those states issued “cause and ...
On a group run through the Arcata marsh, they shared many of them ... and gave them the energy to push through Prairie Creek and up to Klamath to rest for a few hours. Starting the next ...
Firefighters from the Klamath Tribes Native American nation are facing the challenges of battling wildfires in densely populated settings. They're helping crews from all over North America fight ...
Another Spartan looking to find extra success in 2025 is wide receiver Nick Marsh. The only difference between Smith and Marsh is that Marsh was one of the brighter players on the team and was ...
Some might see Henry L. Marsh III’s passing as the end of an era. But that would miss what his life meant to the world. Henry Marsh was more than Richmond’s first Black mayor, more than a ...
Henry L. Marsh III, the first Black mayor of Richmond and a figure who embodied the rise of African American power in the city, died Thursday night at 91. Marsh, a civil rights lawyer, was ...
CHARLESTON, S.C. (WCIV) — At Hideaway Farms, located off Cowboy Way and Rodeo Drive, two Marsh Tacky horses named Drew and Sage stand as living symbols of South Carolina's rich history.