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Michael “Mick” Harold Fletcher, 78, passed away Monday, June 28, 2021 at Memorial Hospital of Sweetwater County in Rock Springs, WY. Mr. Fletcher was a long-time resident of Rock Springs and a former resident of Salt Lake City, UT. He was born October 22, 1942 in Rock Springs; the son of Harold Bud Korogi and Lucille Fletcher. He was raised from the age of five by his loving grandmother Jessie Fletcher. Mr. Fletcher attended schools in Rock Springs and was a 1960 graduate of Rock Springs High School. Advertisement - Story continues below. He married Carole Boschetto on September 21, 1961 in Rock Springs. They had three children, and later divorced. Mr. Fletcher married Joanie Parks on May 24, 1978 in Manilla, UT. They had three children, and later divorced. ....
Big stories run through the exhibition Big Weather and other works in the NGV Collection, serving as a reminder of our reciprocal relationship with the weather, as well as the continuous and important nature of storytelling. As Dr Jared M. Field says, stories need to be told and retold, enabling us to both carry responsibility and pass it on. He shares a few of the works whose big stories resonate with him. The Wanjina of Alec Mingelmanganu creep me out. But goodways, you know? They remind me of childhood and long hours listening to ghost stories. Stories that were told always in the same setting: a thin sheet on the floor, a pack of cards, and tea aplenty. And always by the same people: mum, aunties, and aunties that aren’t aunties but definitely are. These stories often left me scared, but also feeling protected. Protected, of course, because of who was doing the telling: there is no safer place than the arms of an old Black lady. These stories now also provide c ....
Indigenous stewardship linked to biodiversity Research confirms that human land use doesn’t have to be at nature’s expense. Indigenous villagers in the heavily forested state of Odisha, India. Humans have inhabited and influenced the majority of the Earth’s land for over 12,000 years, according to a new study – but not always to the detriment of the environment. The study, led by Erle Ellis from the University of Maryland in the US, combined global patterns of population and land use over the past 12,000 years with today’s biodiversity data. It reveals that nature as we know it has been shaped by humans for thousands of years, and that the land practices of traditional and Indigenous peoples have historically helped sustain biodiversity. ....