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Archive for September, 2006

Wendell Berry: Not a Vision of Our Future, But of Ourselves

The only limits so far honored by this industry have been technological. What its machines have enabled it to do, it has done. And now, for the sake of the coal under them, it is destroying whole mountains with their forests, water courses and human homeplaces. The resulting rubble of soils and blasted rocks is then shoved indiscriminately into the valleys. This is a history by any measure deplorable, and a commentary sufficiently devastating upon the intelligence of our politics and our system of education. That Kentuckians and their politicians have shut their eyes to this history as it was being made is an indelible disgrace. That they now permit this history to be justified by its increase of the acreage of “flat land” in the mountains signifies an indifference virtually suicidal. Read More….




David W. Orr: The Carbon Connection

Nearly a thousand miles separates the coalfields of West Virginia from the city of New Orleans and the Gulf coast, yet they are a lot closer than that. The connection is carbon. Coal is mostly carbon and for every ton burned, 3.6 tons of CO2 eventually enters the atmosphere raising global temperatures, warming oceans thereby creating bigger storms, melting ice, and raising sea levels. For every ton of coal extracted from the mountains, perhaps a 100 tons of what is tellingly called “overburden” is dumped, burying steams and filling the valleys and hollows of West Virginia, Kentucky, Virginia, and Tennessee. And between the hills of Appalachia and the sinking land of the Louisiana coast, tens of thousands of people living downwind from coal-fired power plants die prematurely each year from inhalation of small particles of smoke laced with heavy metals that penetrate deeply into their lungs. Read More….




Janice Nease: Remembering the past, working for the future

The real Appalachia is lush green mountains, deep ancient forests, ice-cold trout streams, small hill-farms, and little mountain communities filled with unpretentious working-class people. Common sense and commitment are common values. Appalachians tend to look back more than most other Americans. They define who they are by how they fit into an extended family, which includes ancestors. Their roots run deep in the mountain soil, deeper than corporate greed and political corruption. Read More….




Guyandotte Mountain

Anna Santo, AV Staff

As West Virginia’s tallest mountain west of the New River, Guyandotte Mountain, also known as Bolte Mountain and “Big Ugly,” stands at a magnificent 3600 feet. For the past 11,000 years, communities of hunters and gatherers, pioneers, and more recently, miners, have inhabited the area surrounding Guyandotte Mountain.

The habitat created by Guyandotte Mountain is largely forested, at a high elevation, steep, sloped terrain with gaps among mature forests- ideal for many rare avian species. As the Audobon Society describes it, Guyandotte Mountain “…harbor[s] the highest avian species diversity and density of any statewide point count.” The habitat on Guyandotte Mountain is unique because it is considered a “transition zone,” where high elevation avian species frequently overlap with low elevation species and old field or edge-dwelling species are almost equally abundant as species that prefer interior forest habitat.

Guyandotte Mountain harbors the Three Rivers Migration Observatory and the Southern West Virginia Bird Research Center. The Golden-Winged and Cerulean Warblers, both species of high conservation concern, have high-density populations on Guyandotte Mountain. With mountaintop removal coal operations fragmenting and destroying their habitat, these rare avian species will only become more rare.





Appalachian Voices  •  Coal River Mountain Watch  •   Heartwood  •  Keeper of the MountainsKentuckians for the Commonwealth 

Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition  •   Statewide Organizing for Community eMpowermentSierra Club Environmental Justice

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