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Grassi Lakes and Ha Ling closed again

For two years, those stuck at home in Canada and abroad have been planning where to visit this summer – now that Covid is … over? Some of them will go to…

Grassi Lakes and Ha Ling closed again

For two years, those stuck at home in Canada and abroad have been planning where to visit this summer – now that Covid is … over? Some of them will go to…

Petroglyph vandalism is not a victimless crime

In late April, at the site known as Birthing Rock near Moab, Utah, vandals defaced thousand-year-old petroglyphs, scrawling the words “white power” and other obscene graffiti, including an ejaculating penis, across the red sandstone. Only one of the boulder’s four petroglyph panels remained unscathed. The vandalism came just a few weeks after a rock climber bolted climbing routes over petroglyphs near the Sunshine Slabs, north of Utah’s Arches National Park.   “I think people view these (incidents) as a victimless crime, and they are not.” The recent acts of vandalism are a reminder of the need for greater protection and more education about public lands, Indigenous archaeologists say. “A lot of people have no clue about contemporary Indigenous peoples and their connection to archaeological resources,” Ashleigh Thompson (Red Lake Ojibwe), a doctoral candidate in archaeology at University of Arizona and an avid rock climber, said. “I think people view these (inci

Climbing bolts found on rock-art images left by Indigenous people in Utah more than 1,000 years ago

Climbing bolts found on rock-art images left by Indigenous people in Utah more than 1,000 years ago © Provided by New York Daily News Rock art left by Indigenous people in Moab, Utah more than 1,000 year ago has been permanently damaged after a climber inserted a line of bolts into the images. The damage was discovered last week by the climber Darrin Reay, who was climbing around the Sunshine Slabs just north of Arches National Park, when he saw the bolts. “I started climbing,” Reay told the  Colorado Springs Gazette. “And I look up, and all of a sudden I’m standing before a giant petroglyph with a line of bolts going right through the middle of it.”

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