This is the second book on Indigenous foodways I’ve started this spring (the first is Recovering our Ancestor’s Gardens) and it is also the second book whose spine I felt crack for the first time as I opened it. This knowledge can’t stay ignored. 🧵
The carbon emissions from the Willow project would result in $19.8 billion or more in climate change-related damages. How much federal revenue would the project purportedly bring in? $3.9 billion.
@POTUS, It's just not worth it. #StopWillow https://t.co/P4TKLHZP3Y
Please #StopWillow and save us from 30 years of destructive drilling. Willow has no place in our clean energy future. We need @POTUS & @SecDebHaaland to be climate heroes at this critical moment and stand on the right side of history and say no!!
Protect The Arctic! Stop Willow!
We need your vote! In addition to our nomination for "Best Magazine," we have also been nominated for "Best Writing (Editorial)" in the People's Voice @TheWebbyAwards. Place your vote from the link below and RT and share! #webbys https://t.co/Oefvo5NOV3
Writing an article on the endemic moths at white sands and learned two amazing facts. 1)Insects comprise 90-95% of all animal species and the greatest biomass on the planet. 2)100% of adult insects die every year except for a few queen termites and ants
@localecologist Somewhat related but the Spanish brought the acequia irrigation system to New Mexico and there's some thought the technology was brought to Spain from Northern Africa during Arab conquest of the Iberian penninsula...
“Perhaps the deepest feminine knowledge we might renew is that of how to be present in the unknown, of how to be always in the state of becoming.” @GinaRaeLC considers what could serve today’s fragmented world. #InternationalWomensDay. https://t.co/DnRcrjIEnu
Reading recommendations for #InternationalWomensDay 📚
From a biography of the trailblazing Indigenous icon and singer-songwriter Buffy Sainte-Marie to a fitness expert’s rallying cry for women in menopause, here’s a few books for honoring the incredible work of women.
Happy publication day to THE PLANT HUNTER! In this uplifting and adventure-filled memoir, leading ethnobotanist @QuaveEthnobot tells us the story of her quest to develop new ways to fight illness through the healing powers of plants 🌿
Start reading here: https://t.co/NLawR8QTND
“Each recipe has its own life history: a shift in relationships between people, place, and plants….” In this week’s podcast, Gina Rae La Cerva uncovers the histories of movement, displacement, and rooting in the recipes of her ancestors. https://t.co/Ej7AKd31EA