The July e-newsletter (mailchi.mp/lcfpd/july24) just dropped, and it's hitting all the right notes! 🎶 📺 Watch journalist Bill Kurtis tell a meaningful story about change and a better future. ☀️ Learn about the science of habitat restoration in the summer issue of 𝘏𝘰𝘳𝘪𝘻𝘰𝘯𝘴 (LCFPD.org/Horizons). ♫ Experience the sounds and sights of Gospelfest and Afrofest at Greenbelt Cultural Center in North Chicago. 🍺 Get a limited-edition Brewed XIII (13) T-shirt before they're gone! 𝗥𝗲𝗰𝗲𝗶𝘃𝗲 𝗳𝘂𝘁𝘂𝗿𝗲 𝗲-𝗻𝗲𝘄𝘀𝗹𝗲𝘁𝘁𝗲𝗿𝘀: LCFPD.org/enews-signup
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TOMORROW, join some our core NiCHE community members to discuss our impact over the past two decades!! Wednesday, April 24, 1PM ET / 5PM GMT, Zoom https://lnkd.in/gDrgvskZ #environmentalhistory #canadianhistory #environmentalhumanities #historicalgeography
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Award-winning 🎓writer. I help aspiring writers ✍️find and write true stories that matter. Free Guided workbook at AmyLouJenkins.com
When searching for the perfect gift for the science and nature enthusiast in your life, consider the rich tapestry of stories found in these 12 remarkable memoirs. Read more 👉 https://lttr.ai/AMaWY #NatureEnthusiasts #GiftGuide #RobinWallKimmerer
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On the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation, we look to the 4 Bundles from "Paddling Upstream" for the needs and recommendations for artists and arts organizations on the path to supporting Indigenous sovereignty. In alignment with the Truth and Reconciliation Commission's recommendations, "Paddling Upstream" is a valuable resource for a deeper understanding of the space and funding support needed to support the growing Indigenous arts ecology in Ontario. Read Paddling Upstream: https://lnkd.in/dpJYsGdY
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Citizen Scientist and Science Communicator | Western Ghats Hornbill Foundation Intern | Botany Graduate | Teacher | Book Reviewer
These are some of my observations from today for the City Nature Challenge 🤩🥳 Are you participating? if not, what are you waiting for? 🤩 City Nature Challenge is a four day Bioblitz from April 26 to 29, 2024 organised by Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, California Academy of Sciences and WWF-India. Taking part is simple, download the iNaturalist app, and upload photos of organisms around you, and that's all!! Know more at https://lnkd.in/gs2ruybK 🌿
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Museum conservator | Writer | Building an inclusive network in heritage and conservation | Posts and articles on the process
I hope you are liking these resource shares! If you haven't heard about the Conserve o Grams by the National Park Service, you are in for a treat! The Conserve o Grams are free downloadable PDF leaflets on a variety of conservation and collections care topics. They include all sorts of materials and even information on emergency response, packaging and documentation for various purposes. It's an excellent little resource regardless of your background or level of expertise. Highly recommended! Oh, and just in case - no, they don't fully count as academic sources for your essay citations. Better to go to the original academic sources for that. ___ Follow for more resources and tips from the GLAM world 🖼📙🗄🏛 GLAM - 🖼Galleries📙Libraries🗄Archives🏛Museums . . . #artconservation #preventiveconservation #collectionscare
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Project Manager, Farm Consultant, Ecological Infrastructure, Farmer,Builder . Top 20 Emerging Leader in Food and Ag
Watershed engineers. What happens when we create the conditions conducive for life we have so often removed those conditions or made it very difficult for life to cycle naturally or how it has for millennium. Through our and extraction, we have created a degenerative system. It's only when we stop that cycle and start working towards cyclical opportunities where we increase the cycling of natural processes that will begin to restore and work towards generative and regenerative process. ReGeneration is about natural life, cycles, and energy transfer. How does that energy transfer grow in a way that benefits life and all. It seems that almost every sector is using the word regeneration or regenerative, and the only guidepost is if one aspect of that products or service has a regenerative aspect. Life in itself is regenerative if we choose it to be. Beavers are watershed engineers, and are key players in the restoration of our ecosystems #Beavers #WatershedRestoration #Regeneration
runs Climate Water Project, water researcher, writer and podcaster, bringing people together in the regenerative water field, climatewaterproject.substack.com, instagram.com/climatewaterproject
There is a stone in stone bridges - called a keystone - which if we removed, causes the whole bridge to collapse. Keystone species are species which when removed from ecosystems cause things to fall apart. Sea otters are a keystone species. When they leave an area, kelp forests get decimated. That’s because the sea otters are no longer keeping in check the population of sea urchins, which will multiply to eat the whole kelp forest. Restoration of the kelp forest can transpire by bringing back sea otters. Beavers are a keystone species that have played an outsize role in the development of the landscapes and ecosystems of North America and Europe. The removal of them from our continents led to the Great Drying ( a term coined by the geomorphologist and beaver researcher Ellen Wohl) that extended from 1600 to 1900. When I connected with Leila Philip, author of Beaverland - How one weird rodent made America, she bubbled with enthusiasm talking about the importance of beavers to our ecosystems. She writes in her book “When the glaciers of the last ice age melted.. the modern ancestors of today’s beavers wet at it, felling trees and building dams throughout Asia, Europe, and the Americas. In North America, beaver dams, ponds, and waterworks established hydraulic systems that created much of the rich biodiversity of the continent. That was the primordial Beaverland - North America before European colonizatio, when as many as four hundred million beavers filled the continent….. The great boreal forests that sprang up, threaded with beaver made waterways, would have looked something like what I see now- half water-world- streams spreading out through the forest as great fans of water, overspilling banks, then receding in rhythm with the seasons. Unlike the streams and rivers we know today, mostly degraded so that their currents carve channels through the earth, picking up speed and causing more erosion as they cut deeper into the groun, these messy, slower-moving streams and rivers from the time of Beaverland contracted and expanded like tides, they were arteries and veins of water pulsing life into the land” The importance of bringing back keystone species has been increasingly utilized by the ecorestoration and rewilding movements. In our time of multiple water crises, we would do well to integrate beavers into our water strategy for North America and Europe. The beavers help rehydrate the land, and they help mitigate floods. In the Chesapeake Bay beavers build, for free, stormwater management ponds that that would otherwise cost one to two million dollars, ponds that help extract the pollutants out of the water. Beavers also help stop wildfire. Researchers have shown the land is much less affected by wildfires where beavers make dams compared to beaverless areas. For the full essay, podcast and transcript of my interview of Leila Philip see https://lnkd.in/gdQ8Q4gq \
Beaverland: interview with author Leila Philip
climatewaterproject.substack.com
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runs Climate Water Project, water researcher, writer and podcaster, bringing people together in the regenerative water field, climatewaterproject.substack.com, instagram.com/climatewaterproject
There is a stone in stone bridges - called a keystone - which if we removed, causes the whole bridge to collapse. Keystone species are species which when removed from ecosystems cause things to fall apart. Sea otters are a keystone species. When they leave an area, kelp forests get decimated. That’s because the sea otters are no longer keeping in check the population of sea urchins, which will multiply to eat the whole kelp forest. Restoration of the kelp forest can transpire by bringing back sea otters. Beavers are a keystone species that have played an outsize role in the development of the landscapes and ecosystems of North America and Europe. The removal of them from our continents led to the Great Drying ( a term coined by the geomorphologist and beaver researcher Ellen Wohl) that extended from 1600 to 1900. When I connected with Leila Philip, author of Beaverland - How one weird rodent made America, she bubbled with enthusiasm talking about the importance of beavers to our ecosystems. She writes in her book “When the glaciers of the last ice age melted.. the modern ancestors of today’s beavers wet at it, felling trees and building dams throughout Asia, Europe, and the Americas. In North America, beaver dams, ponds, and waterworks established hydraulic systems that created much of the rich biodiversity of the continent. That was the primordial Beaverland - North America before European colonizatio, when as many as four hundred million beavers filled the continent….. The great boreal forests that sprang up, threaded with beaver made waterways, would have looked something like what I see now- half water-world- streams spreading out through the forest as great fans of water, overspilling banks, then receding in rhythm with the seasons. Unlike the streams and rivers we know today, mostly degraded so that their currents carve channels through the earth, picking up speed and causing more erosion as they cut deeper into the groun, these messy, slower-moving streams and rivers from the time of Beaverland contracted and expanded like tides, they were arteries and veins of water pulsing life into the land” The importance of bringing back keystone species has been increasingly utilized by the ecorestoration and rewilding movements. In our time of multiple water crises, we would do well to integrate beavers into our water strategy for North America and Europe. The beavers help rehydrate the land, and they help mitigate floods. In the Chesapeake Bay beavers build, for free, stormwater management ponds that that would otherwise cost one to two million dollars, ponds that help extract the pollutants out of the water. Beavers also help stop wildfire. Researchers have shown the land is much less affected by wildfires where beavers make dams compared to beaverless areas. For the full essay, podcast and transcript of my interview of Leila Philip see https://lnkd.in/gdQ8Q4gq \
Beaverland: interview with author Leila Philip
climatewaterproject.substack.com
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European partnerships, translation (Finnish), Northern Europe in French, Senior Advisor Innovation for sustainable development
Water resources
Humanity, a species nurtured on a watery planet, is struggling to manage its most abundant resource. Two new books highlight why https://lnkd.in/eXTnkNCS Photo: Getty Images
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Download your copy now..
Nature-Inspired Play🌳 Nature presents limitless possibilities for exploration and creativity. Discover the enchantment of natural play with our latest catalogue. Request your copy today and venture into a world where nature meets play 👉https://bit.ly/4cIZi3Z
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(video and article) Today is the Winter Solstice, the shortest day/ longest night of the year, and the first day of winter. For many, including Indigenous people, it is a special day. https://lnkd.in/gYqia_r5 Here is a short article that includes a kids video of a scientific explanation of the Winter Solstice. https://lnkd.in/gefNUBY3
The importance of winter solstice in Indigenous culture - The Weather Network
theweathernetwork.com
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