Aloha 'Satchmo' Friday!
Louis Armstrong was among the most influential figures in
jazz whose career spanned five decades and several eras in the
history of jazz. Happy birthday, Pops.
Ocean
temperatures are off the charts. Here’s where they’re
highest.
Marine heat waves are affecting about 44 percent of the global
ocean, whereas only 10 percent is typical, and they can have
“significant impacts on marine life as well as coastal
communities and economies,” according to the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration.
A
Last-Gasp Effort to Resurrect a Mine in Bristol Bay
The state of Alaska has taken its case directly to the U.S.
Supreme Court in an 11th hour effort to resurrect a giant, open
pit copper and gold mine, proposed for a location in western
Alaska that flanks two of Bristol Bay’s renowned salmon spawning
watersheds.
A
parched summer is posing difficulties for Washington farmers
and fish
The record-warm May that burned off a sizable chunk of the
state’s snowpack has left flows in many of Washington’s rivers
and streams depleted heading into late summer. it’s still bad
news for fish that depend on cool water and ample streamflows
for survival and farmers who tap snow-fed waterways to irrigate
crops.
Watch
Site C workers build a massive dam using 16 million cubic
metres of earth and rock
B.C. Hydro says it has completed an earth-fill dam made using
material from the Site C dam construction site along the Peace
River in northeastern B.C.
BC
Breaks Records for Area Burned in Wildfires, Data Show
See this season’s damage on our timeline. And the year’s not
even over.
Ticks
spreading in the Pacific Northwest? Warming trends could
worsen health threat
More commonly found in the Midwest and northeast, ticks are
expanding their range... Warming trends, exacerbated by climate
change, are creating a more hospitable environment for the
parasites. Conrad Swanson reports.
Ocean
heat wave comes to Pacific Northwest shores
Now the Pacific Northwest has joined the rest of the world in
having exceptional ocean heat.
Conservationists Push EPA to Add 1,000+ Pollutants to 'Outdated' List of Toxic Chemicals
According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's official
documentation, no toxic pollutants have emerged in the United States in
nearly five decades—and two advocacy groups on Monday demanded that the
agency add more than 1,000 chemicals to its list to bring the inventory
up to date.
Site C dam builder fined $1.1 million for discharging contaminated wastewater
In B.C.’s Peace River, home to at-risk species, more than three million
litres of wastewater contained a concentration of aluminum ‘acutely
lethal’ to fish.
These news clips are a selection of weekday clips collected in
Salish Sea News and Weather which
is compiled as a community service by Mike Sato. To subscribe at
no cost to the weekday news clips, send your name and email to
mikesato772 at gmail.com. Your email information is never shared
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