New York Times
If you hunt and use lead, then moving to copper and other non-toxic ammo is the conservative thing to do.
Lakeshore Living. News on lake ecology, lake pollution, land use, natural resource management, community, and lakeshore living.
New York Times
If you hunt and use lead, then moving to copper and other non-toxic ammo is the conservative thing to do.
Great Lakes Echo:
Nautius:
A great article about the stories that the mud of a lake tells a scientist.
Duluth News Tribune:
The article is a reminder of the struggles it took to designate this wonderful place for enjoyment of wildness. The struggle continues.
FiveThirtyEight:
Bloomberg:
Interesting series of maps on land use.
UW-Madison Center for Limnology
CityLab:
It is a reasonable plan. One hopes that the car-free elements are expanded as development progresses.
ENSIA:
For more information, I suggest reading Thinking In Systems by Donella Meadows and the following website: http://donellameadows.org/systems-thinking-resources/
University of Wisconsin - Madison:
All About Birds:
In Minnesota, an estimated 100 to 200 loons die each year from lead poisoning.
The Behavioral Scientist:
In the 1960s and 1970s, William Whyte was studying human behavior in New York City and applying similar thinking in the United States.
University of Wisconsin-Madison:
Are Technica:
"be not too eager to deal out death in the name of Justice ... even the wise cannot see all ends.” Gandalf, Lord of the Rings by J. R. R. Tolkien
One wonders if our in haste to control non-native species at almost all cost that our selection of so-called "good" species might be misplaced and unwise.
University of Minnesota:
Lakeshore Living and Walleye. This blog builds upon these books, which provides insight into relevant aspects of environmentally-sensitive lakeshore living and the life of walleye. This blog may provide some meaning for people interested in improving lakeshore living and understanding walleye and fisheries management.
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