We’re joined this week by author and urban planner Hannah Palmer on a journey to find the Flint river in Atlanta, Georgia. Like so many urban rivers, the Flint is hardly recognizable as a river, at least at it’s headwaters beneath the Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport. Through an effort called “Finding the Flint”, Hannah is working to bring the river back to the surface, both in terms of how it flows, and its role in people’s lives. This story of the Flint River isn’t unique, and as is so often the case, the way we treat our rivers is the way we treat our communities, and the long-term health and viability of the two are inextricably linked. We hope you’ll tune in.
NOTES:
http://hannahspalmer.com/flightpath
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We’re joined this week by author and urban planner Hannah Palmer on a journey to find the Flint river in Atlanta, Georgia. Like so many urban rivers, the Flint is hardly recognizable as a river, at least at it’s headwaters beneath the Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport. Through an effort called “Finding the Flint”, Hannah is working to bring the river back to the surface, both in terms of how it flows, and its role in people’s lives. This story of the Flint River isn’t unique, and as is so often the case, the way we treat our rivers is the way we treat our communities, and the long-term health and viability of the two are inextricably linked. We hope you’ll tune in.
NOTES:
http://hannahspalmer.com/flightpath
Episode 39: Beavers, killer whales, and the tie that binds
We Are Rivers
44 minutes 47 seconds
4 years ago
Episode 39: Beavers, killer whales, and the tie that binds
In this, our latest episode of We Are Rivers, we talk beavers and killer whales, poop sniffing dogs, and the inextricable link between wildlife, biodiversity, and healthy rivers. And, we imagine how we might translate this level of integrated understanding to policies and practices that govern rivers. This is the first of a two-part series. Join us!
NOTES:
Denielle Perry, Free Flowing Rivers Lab
Free-flowing Rivers Lab
https://denielleperry.com/research/
https://riverfieldstudies.com/
www.naustudentwatersymposium.com
Deborah Giles, University of Washington and
https://www.washington.edu/news/people/deborah-giles/
https://www.wildorca.org/team/
Mark Beardsley
Ecometrics (Mark’s company): https://www.ecometricscolorado.net/
The Beaver Believers: https://www.thebeaverbelievers.com/filmmakers
Eager: The Suprising, Secret Life of Beavers and Why They Matter https://www.bengoldfarb.com/eager
Enos Mills, In Beaver World
Emily Fairfax, research, “Smokey the Beaver: beaver-dammed riparian corridors stay green during wildfire throughout western United States”
We Are Rivers
We’re joined this week by author and urban planner Hannah Palmer on a journey to find the Flint river in Atlanta, Georgia. Like so many urban rivers, the Flint is hardly recognizable as a river, at least at it’s headwaters beneath the Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport. Through an effort called “Finding the Flint”, Hannah is working to bring the river back to the surface, both in terms of how it flows, and its role in people’s lives. This story of the Flint River isn’t unique, and as is so often the case, the way we treat our rivers is the way we treat our communities, and the long-term health and viability of the two are inextricably linked. We hope you’ll tune in.
NOTES:
http://hannahspalmer.com/flightpath