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logo 9/24/2024 2:32:45 PM     
A tiny Alaska town is split over a goldmine. At stake is a way of life 
By Dominic Rushe US Source: theguardian 6/22/2021
Dominic Rushe
Credit: Ben Huff/The Guardian
For 2,000 years, Jones Hotch’s ancestors have fished Alaska’s Chilkat River for the five species of salmon that spawn in its cold, clean waters. They have gathered berries, hunted moose and raised their families, sheltered from the extremes of winter by the black, saw-toothed peaks of the Iron Mountain.

Now Hotch fears a proposed mining project could end that way of life.
 

Hotch has an infectious, boyish laugh – but there is no mistaking how worried he is about plans to build a mine where millions of pounds of zinc, copper, lead, silver and gold are buried, beneath the valleys’ mountains. We arejust miles from the headwaters of the Chilkat, the glacial river that serves as the main food source of the Tlingit, the region’s Indigenous people, as well as the inhabitants of Haines, the nearest port town.

 
Chilkat River Salmon, Chinook Continue...


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