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Environment

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Accelerating climate change threatens Adirondack fish

By Brandon Loomis

Some parts of the world, including much of North America, outpace the global average in large part because much of the planet is covered by water and it takes more energy to warm oceans than land. That explains how the Adirondacks can be so far ahead of global change.

Tahawus rail in the Adirondacks

Federal board orders status report in 2019 on Tahawus rail line

By Michael Virtanen

Federal authorities have halted consideration of whether the 30-mile rail line from North Creek to the former Tahawus mine in the central Adirondacks should be declared abandoned, ordering the current owner and a potential buyer to file a status report by Jan. 22, 2019.

Land groups preserve 2,500 acres and a native trout

By Brandon Loomis

The Adirondack Land Trust purchased the 2,122-acre Little Charley Pond tract for $2 million in 2007, executive director Mike Carr said. Now a buyer wishing to remain anonymous has purchased the trust's property for $1.9 million and granted a conservation easement ensuring that no more than one new camp will be built there.

DEC backs extended hunting camps leases, land offset

By Michael Virtanen

The original 1999 easement, for which the state paid $1.7 million, allowed six hunting camps in perpetuity, requiring removal of 30 others from the tract in Colton within 15 years. That deadline fell three years ago.

Man charged with illegally killing bears

By Mike Lynch

A Morrisonville man is due in court later this month after he admitted to killing four bears over a bait pile, according to the state Department of Environmental Conservation. The bears included a sow and her two cubs.

How to poop outside

By Mike Lynch

Learn about proper techniques for pooping outside in this instructional video by the Leave No Trace Center for Outdoor Ethics.

Rebirth at Flat Rock Forest (photo gallery and video)

By Mike Lynch

Jack pines are dependent upon fires. Their cones remain closed until they are exposed to the heat of a forest fire.

Road salt lawsuit looms as residents fight contamination

By Michael Virtanen

New York spent about $214 million in the last snowplowing year, according to New York's Office of General Services.

DEC video about Lake Flower clean up

By Adirondack Explorer

Environmental Engineer Sarah Saucier is the project manager of the Saranac Lake Gas Company Superfund Site. The site, a former Manufactured Gas Plant, operated from the 1800’s to the 1940’s and used coal to manufacture gas for heating, lighting, and cooking. This created a coal tar by-product that contaminated some areas in the village. Sarah…

Zoe Smith

Paul Smith’s hires Wildlife Conservation Society staffers

By Brandon Loomis

Zoe Smith, formerly the AWS program's director, is now deputy director at the college's Adirondack Watershed Institute. Former AWS science director Michale Glennon joins the institute and retains the same title there.

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