Susan Marsh
Author
Pub. Date
Ã2014.
Summary
"Before the 1970s few women were employed by the U.S. Forest Service. During the 1960s and 70s new environmental and fair employment laws meant that the agency began to hire talented women in professional careers. For the first time women began working as wildlife biologists, geologists, soil scientists, and fisheries biologists for the Forest Service. A Hunger for High Country is the story of one of these women. Set in the national forests surrounding...
Author
Pub. Date
2017
Summary
Too Special to Drill tells the story of the Hoback and Noble Basins in northwestern Wyoming and of the citizens who worked together to protect the land that they loved. Retired schoolteachers, mine workers, big game hunting outfitters, and other stakeholders brought together their knowledge of the area to achieve a single goal: to prevent the industrialization of the wild country that was their home. While some disagreed about specifics, their work...
Pub. Date
2013
Summary
The Wyoming Range stands like a dusky silhouette above the sagebrush sea, revealing its splendor only to those who venture off the highway. Its snowy peaks and long ridgelines extend nearly a hundred miles from the confluence of the Hoback and Snake Rivers to the headwaters of LaBarge Creek. The mountains highlighted in this book of photographys and essays include not only the Wyoming Range but the Salt River Range, Greys River, and the long, high...