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Bibliothek | Materialtyp | Regalnummer | Anzahl untergeordneter Datensätze | Regalstandort | Status | Item Holds |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Suche... Science | Book | QH 545 .O57 A74 2001 | 1 | Stacks | Suche... Unknown | Suche... Unavailable |
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Zusammenfassung
Zusammenfassung
Originally presented to Congress on March 28, 2001, this book brings together the latest word from key conservation leaders as well as firsthand accounts by Alaska residents on how they and neighboring wildlife would be affected should oil drilling proceed according to current plans. The book includes original pieces by Jimmy Carter, Wendell Berry, Barry Lopez, Bill McKibben, Scott Russell Sanders, Rick Bass, and Terry Tempest Williams. All royalties from sales of Arctic Refuge -- and an additional contribution from Milkweed Editions -- will go to the Alaska Conservation Foundation.
Rezensionen (1)
Publisher's Weekly-Rezension
Yoking an activist desire to influence the debate surrounding proposed oil exploration and drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to the rapid publication now possible with e-book technology, Alaska residents Lentfer and Servid solicited, compiled and completed this powerful collection of 31 essays, letters and poems in eight weeks. The contributors, who range "from global leaders to nomadic hunters," attest to the ecological diversity and spiritual sanctity of the 18 million-acre wilderness, home to caribou, bears, wolves, eagles, wolverines, foxes and ravens, and the 15 villages of the Gwich'in Indians. The most piercing entries range from a brief, plainspoken "Letter to the President" by conservationist Margaret Murie (whose efforts led to the formation of the refuge in 1960) to the hope of a Gwich'in woman, Faith Gemmill, that her children will take their sustenance from the caribou and "listen to traditional teachings in their own traditional language," as she has. Wildlife biologist Bill Sherwonit lyrically describes the habits of pregnant polar bears, while Bill McKibben warns that an "oil spill may not happen in [the Refuge], but it will definitely happen in the atmosphere" when any extracted oil is burned, and Barry Lopez eloquently suggests that we must reign in the adolescent impulses that fuel our consumer economy if we are to solve the dilemmas posed by our ravenous oil consumption. FYI: Presented to Congress on March 27, and publicized in a joint effort with the Alaska Wilderness League, this e-book precedes a trade edition coming in June (Milkweed, $15 paper ISBN 1-57131-264-1).n (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Inhaltsverzeichnis
A Call to Gather | p. x |
We Are the Ones Who Have Everything to Lose | p. 3 |
A Presidential Perspective | p. 6 |
A Congressional Perspective | p. 9 |
Tea with Mardy | p. 11 |
Letter to the President | p. 14 |
Turning | p. 15 |
Endangered Peoples | p. 19 |
Hey Mom, What Does Refuge Mean? | p. 24 |
Century's Theme | p. 27 |
It's a R-E-F-U-G-E | p. 31 |
Arctic Refuge: Polar Bears and Seismic Testing | p. 33 |
Polar Bear Protection | p. 37 |
Warnings of a Wildlife Biologist | p. 40 |
The Conundrum of Caribou Complexity | p. 43 |
Caribou Story | p. 48 |
Of Caribou and Carbon | p. 52 |
Junk: The Entropy of Imagination | p. 56 |
Lessons of the Exxon Valdez | p. 61 |
Another Country | p. 64 |
Leaving a Legacy | p. 66 |
In the Eyes of a Wolf | p. 71 |
A Declaration Opposing Oil Development in the Arctic Refuge | p. 75 |
Adolescence | p. 76 |
The Color of Choice | p. 83 |
Ships on Shoals and the Winter of Two Suns | p. 86 |
Covenant | p. 90 |
Hell, No. Of Course Not. But ... | p. 93 |
Engines and Empire | p. 96 |
One Moderate's Heart | p. 97 |
Wilderness As a Sabbath for the Land | p. 101 |
Wild Mercy | p. 105 |
Afterword | p. 106 |
Contributors | p. 109 |