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Scientific American June 2007 |
Serengeti in the Dakotas A proposed Pleistocene rewilding would restock the Great Plains with large mammal species like those that roamed the continent before humans crossed the Bering Strait -- species such as camels, lions and elephants.  |
Wired September 22, 2008 Andrew Curry |
Pleistocene Park: Where the Auroxen Roam In theory, we could re-create conditions that last existed when mammoths walked the earth and the environment was healthier and more diverse.  |
Outside December 2007 Douglas Gantenbein |
Fire Away In March, about 1,545 wolves in Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming are to be taken off the endangered species list. That means they're going to be hunted. And this may be exactly what the species needs.  |
Scientific American November 2008 Barbara Juncosa |
The Role of Random Events in Extinction Chance disaster is a bigger extinction threat than once thought.  |
Outside October 2003 Bruce Barcott |
Back in the Crosshairs The gray wolf may lose federal protection. Will killing it become the law of the land?  |
IDB America June 2005 Roger Hamilton |
On the Trail of the Peripatetic Pathogen Disease microbes make common cause between farmers and conservationists in far western Sao Paulo State, Brazil.  |
Smithsonian February 2005 Leslie Allen |
Phenomena and Curiosities: Back Home on the Range When a group of Native Americans took up bison ranching, they brought a prairie back to life.  |
Fast Company Sarah Lawson |
South African Airways Lifts Ban On Hunters' Animal Trophies South Africa's largest airline, South African Airways, lifted a ban today that had prohibited the transportation of hunting trophies like the heads or carcasses of elephants, rhinos, and lions, Bloomberg reports.  |
Salon.com March 7, 2002 Katharine Mieszkowski |
"Jurassic Park," eat your heart out Ecological historian Tim Flannery describes the days of megafauna, when 13-ton elephants and shoulder-height armadillos clomped around among humans...  |
Scientific American March 2009 David Appell |
Can "Assisted Migration" Save Species from Global Warming? As the world warms up, some species cannot move to cooler climes in time to survive. Camille Parmesan thinks humans should help even if it means creating invasive species  |
Real Travel Adventures May 2005 Hank Lowenstein |
Into Africa Once you go into Equatorial East Africa the experience is permanently etched into your brain.  |
Real Travel Adventures December 2009 Neely & Neely |
Tanzania's National Parks: Arusha We fulfilled a long-held dream this year by going to East Africa for a Wildlife Photo Safari, and it was, perhaps, THE most amazingly memorable trip in all of our thirty-plus years as travel writers!  |
AskMen.com August 2, 2001 Harry Marks |
Top 10: Safari & Wildlife Destinations Life getting boring and mundane? Tired of leaving the big city for another city full of pollution and high-rises? Why not embrace a challenge and hit the sights for something different?  |
DailyCandy April 16, 2005 |
Travel: Surfin' Safaris A South African adventure for every budget.  |
Outside November 2009 Elizabeth Hightower |
Creating Conservation Communities There's a bold new idea on the front edge of conservation: Let's treat people as well as we treat animals.  |
Smithsonian July 2006 Seidensticker & Lumpkin |
Building An Arc Despite poachers, insurgents and political upheaval, India and Nepal's bold approach to saving wildlife in the Terai Arc just may succeed.  |
Geotimes June 2006 |
Geomedia On exhibit: Art from the Rocks... Books: Twilight of the Mammoths: Ice Age Extinctions and the Rewilding of America by Paul Martin... Pleistocene Ecology and Public Policy by Christopher L. Hill... etc.  |
Reason January 2009 Ronald Bailey |
Friendly Invasion End species discrimination -- newly introduced species may be able to get along with their native brethren better than previously believed.  |
Macworld March 31, 2006 Peter Cohen |
Wildlife Tycoon: Venture Africa Wildlife Tycoon: Venture Africa is a strategy game with a nice change of pace -- it places an emphasis on understanding nature, not destroying things.  |