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Geos Institute helps communities build resilience in the face of climate change
By Matthew Preusch
The Oregonian
By Matthew Preusch
OregonLive.com
By Paul Fattig
Medford Mail Tribune
By Christy George
OPB News
By Mark Freeman
Medford Mail Tribune

Salmon, water, old-growth forests and climate win!

WASHINGTON, DC

The Obama administration announced today its decision to cancel a Bush era plan that would have harmed salmon, clean water and old-growth forests on 2.6 million acres of public lands in western Oregon.

JEFF BARNARD AP Environmental Writer  
July 6, 2009
Associated Press Archive

A new study challenges a basic justification about the threat of wildfires that the Bush administration used to make room for more logging in old growth forests that are home to the northern spotted owl.

The study, appearing in the journal Conservation Biology, found no increasing threat of severe wildfires destroying old growth forests in the drier areas where the owl lives in Oregon, Washington and Northern California.  Read more…

By Noelle Straub and Eric Bontrager
eenews.net

Four showcase events: “Shifting Patterns: Preparing for Unsettled Days”

Ashland, Oregon

Jefferson Nature Center is coordinating “Shifting Patterns: Preparing for Unsettled Days,” a climate change arts project that connects sixteen local artists with scientists at the GEOS Institute. “Shifting Patterns” artistic participants include writers, visual artists and performance artists.

By Paul Fattig
Medford Mail Tribune

Dominick DellaSala isn’t normally one to say “I told you so,” but the forest ecologist couldn’t help himself Wednesday.  Read more…

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