Custom Geospatial Solutions News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Stay updated with breaking news from Custom geospatial solutions. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.

Top News In Custom Geospatial Solutions Today - Breaking & Trending Today

Beyond Illusion

This issue takes us into the Mojave Desert, reminding us that landscapes too often dismissed as wastelands have always been home to Indigenous cultures and complex ecosystems. Our feature profiles artist Kim Stringfellow, who has devoted years to interrogating the desert’s history. We visit other unique landscapes, from the Great Basin’s vanishing sagebrush sea to Montana’s alpine peaks, where a strange pink algae is hastening the already rapid snowmelt. We ask uncomfortable questions: After June’s deluge, will developers rethink plans to build in the Yellowstone River’s floodplain? Is carbon capture really a viable solution to climate change? Will Indigenous nations finally receive their share of the Colorado River? And we explore some human ecosystems, honoring the stories of Diné boarding school survivors and the hidden histories of queer folk; chatting with customers on closing day at a diner in St. George, Utah; resurrecting family traditions with homemade fruitcake and ....

Montezuma Well , United States , Mogollon Rim , New Mexico , Sierra Vista , Mental Health Defense , Counseling Center , Long Tom Watershed Council , Health Services , Lower San Pedro Program , Division Of Student Services , Montezuma Well National Monument , Custom Geospatial Solutions , Our Mission , Greater Yellowstone Coalition , Counseling Services , Mexico Land Conservancy , Northern New Mexico Project Manager , Amazon Watch , Can Achieve Together , Geographic Information System , Lower San Pedro Program Manager , Forest Restoration Spatial Data Manager , Water Projects Manager , Student Services , Nature Conservancy ,

The Futures of Conservation

In this special issue, we take an in-depth look at the future of conservation in the West. Experts agree it’s time to upgrade the environmental laws of the 1970s. Chuck Sams, the National Park Service’s first Native director, hopes to lead the agency in a more inclusive direction. Collaboration keeps political extremism at bay in Oregon, seeks to protect eagles from lead poisoning and works to preserve wildlife corridors on both sides of the Borderlands. In Oregon’s Willamette Valley, a small butterfly once thought to be extinct makes a remarkable comeback, while in Colorado’s San Luis Valley, activists forge a sustainable life that reflects their multicultural heritage. On Alaska’s Tongass National Forest, Indigenous youth learn to be stewards of both the land and their culture. Science fiction needn’t be dystopian. Watch out for ecological amnesia: We can’t create a livable future unless we remember our past and pay heed to our present. ....

Montezuma Well , United States , Mogollon Rim , High Country , Yellowstone To Yukon Conservation Initiative , Mental Health Defense , Counseling Center , Borderlands Restoration Network , Wilderness Society , Idaho Wildlife Federation , Health Services , Division Of Student Services , Montezuma Well National Monument , Development Ado , Custom Geospatial Solutions , Our Mission , Trustees For Alaska , Counseling Services , Bale Home , Montezuma Well National , Legal Director , Student Services , Associate Director , Senior Manager , Wilderness Society The Wyoming Senior Manager , Organization The Yellowstone ,

Making Refuge

An unexpected theme runs through our feature stories the idea of “Making Refuge” in the West as we consider how humans and other species can work together to enhance our mutual survival. June T Sanders’ photos and Abigail Hansel’s essay celebrate a community on the Washington-Idaho border that thrives despite anti-trans paranoia and extremism, while B. Toastie teaches us about the age-old relationship between lamprey and tribal communities in the Pacific Northwest. Alliances often spring up in response to crisis: Arizona mobile home owners facing extreme heat, wildland firefighters struggling with long COVID, Westerners working to ensure access to reproductive care. The challenges can seem overwhelming, as Nevada gold miners confront a powerful corporation, Indian Country awaits important Supreme Court decisions, and Westerners worry about the upcoming midterm elections. Arianne Zwartjes’ new book “These Dark Skies” doesn’t hesitate to confront modern-day brutality ....

Muleshoe Ranch , United States , Deschutes Land , Leaders Network , Environmental Humanities Program At Whitman College , Wilderness Society , Federation Is America , Muleshoe Ranch Cooperative Management Area , Invasive Species Action Network , National Wildlife Federation , Custom Geospatial Solutions , Geospatial Solutions , Crazy Woman Bison , Red Brindle , Digital Advocacy , Membership Manager , Digital Outreach Coordinator , Arizona Position Location , Salaried Job , Deschutes Land Trust , Volunteer Program Manager , Nature Conservancy , Muleshoe Ranch Preserve Manager , Associate Professor , Whitman College , Country Conservation Advocates ,

Visions of Wildness

In our final issue of 2021, we dive into controversies, from the fight over putting a wind farm next to a Japanese American incarceration camp, to a report on how income inequality is transforming the West. Lack of housing makes life difficult for Jackson Hole-area workers, while an Indigenous activist questions how much Biden’s Bears Ears proclamation accomplished. Our features tackle two subjects that often divide HCN’s own readers: Wild horses and cattle ranching. On the Wind River Reservation in Wyoming, Indigenous people wonder if wild horses and buffalo can coexist, and we learn about modern-day ranching’s crazy economics when a Washington rancher tries to cheat the big meatpackers and win. Was the Northwest’s summer heat dome a “stress test” for wildlife, or a massacre? There’s even some good news: Activists are unionizing the big environmental groups, we visualize a healthy Klamath River, and an Indigenous writer reclaims her culture’s relationship with fire, wh ....

United States , Methow Valley , North Cascades National Park , Hetch Hetchy , Community Conservation Specialist , Cascades National Park , Custom Geospatial Solutions , Organization Building , Solar Energy International , Executive Director , Teton Valley Idaho , Sierra Vista , Upper San Pedro Project Manager , Alaska Conservation , Blackfoot Challenge , Country News , Contributing Editor , Montana Type , Geospatial Solutions , Energy International ,