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Gabe Dunham with UAF and Alaska Sea Grant at Dillingham s erosion monitoring site by the sewage lagoon, fall 2019. Dunham was part of the initial Stakes for Stakeholders project in 2016 and continues to support erosion research in the region. Researchers from the University of Alaska Fairbanks will travel to Dillingham this week to continue erosion research in 11 of Bristol Bay’s coastal communities. An ongoing project that started in 2016 as “Stakes for Stakeholders,” it aims to help residents monitor erosion with affordable time-lapse cameras and survey equipment on wooden stakes in 10 communities. In Ekuk, Environmental Coordinator Jennifer Robinette has observed the dangers of an eroding coastline in the village. She started tracking erosion on her own before joining the “Stakes for Stakeholders” effort with UAF. ....
Nic Petit is first musher to Forks Roadhouse, 77 miles away from the Willow 300 finish line Author: Anchorage Daily News Wait 1 second to continue. Update, 12:10 a.m. Saturday, Feb. 6: Nic Petit reached Forks Roadhouse at 10:50 p.m. Friday, 77 miles from the finish line. He was one of several mushers who left Trapper Creek on Friday night after serving their mandatory four-hour layovers there. The run to Forks Roadhouse is 40 miles. Petit was the first to depart Trapper Creek, driving away at 6:56 p.m. behind a team of 12 dogs. Hunter Keefe and Linwood Fiedler were next, leaving one after the other at 8:10 p.m. Three others were on the trail by 9 p.m.: Travis Beals (8:40 p.m.), Julie Ahren (8:53 p.m.) and Aaron Burmeister (8:56 p.m.). ....
Todd Radenbaugh remembered as a visionary dedicated to environmental education in Bristol Bay December 24th, 2020 |
Todd Radenbaugh was known for his tenacity and his boundless enthusiasm for education and the environment someone who approached global problems through community action. Sustainability starts local. And sustainability has to stay local. And sustainability has to use both science and local culture, said Radenbaugh, speaking to KDLG last year at Dillingham s March for Science event. Know where your water comes from. I mean, that s a local thing. Know a little geography. Should you build there? Is there a landslide going to come in and hit the property that you just bought. So there s a lot of stuff you can do by educating yourself in a science way that you can be much more compliant with Mother Earth, shall we say, and trying to keep her healthy. ....
5:13 Todd Radenbaugh was known for his tenacity and his boundless enthusiasm for education and the environment someone who approached global problems through community action. Radenbaugh with students at Salmon Camp in 2016. Credit Courtesy of Michele Masley Sustainability starts local. And sustainability has to stay local. And sustainability has to use both science and local culture,” said Radenbaugh, speaking to KDLG last year at Dillingham’s March for Science event. “Know where your water comes from. I mean, that’s a local thing. Know a little geography. Should you build there? Is there a landslide going to come in and hit the property that you just bought. So there’s a lot of stuff you can do by educating yourself in a science way that you can be much more compliant with Mother Earth, shall we say, and trying to keep her healthy.” ....