From the ground, peering up at their vertigo-inducing heights, the green and wooded mountains of southern West Virginia look ancient and undefiled. But from the air, the stark reality of an ecosystem under siege becomes clear. The mountains around Charleston retain their diverse hardwood cover and contours shaped by time immemorial, but things change abruptly 35 miles to the southeast. Replacing the green mountains are flat, bare and terraced plateaus that evoke the mesas of the Southwest, though with added black stripes from the coal seams.
mountaintop removal
Once There Was a Mountain: Ravaging West Virginia for “Clean Coalâ€
(via www.emagazine.com)
Submitted by coastalgirl on Tue, 2007-11-20 02:18. | Tags: business | coal mining | conservation | ecosystems | energy | environment | habitat destruction | mountaintop removal | sustainabililty
Take Action to Fight Mountaintop Removal Mining
(via www.environmental-action.org)
The Bush Administration is proposing to EXPAND mountaintop removal mining - the process where they clearcut and destroy a mountain to get at the coal. This practice obviously destroys habitat, but also pollutes the waterways for the local communities.
Take action - submit your comment to oppose mountaintop removal mining.
Submitted by stafford on Tue, 2007-08-28 16:10. | Tags: take action | action | activist | bush | coal | global warming | mining | mountaintop removal