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Home»Posts tagged with»rozell (Page 3)

Crossing the Divide into a New World

By Ned Rozell | Geophysical Institute on Jul 30, 2017   Featured, North Slope/Northwest Alaska, The Arctic and Alaska Science  

Crossing the Divide into a New World

[wds id=”9″]ATIGUN RIVER — Goodbye, red squirrels. On our summer-long hike along the path of the Trans-Alaska Pipeline, this morning my dog Cora and I left the last tangle of boreal forest along America’s highway system. We walked away from a campsite of white spruce and balsam poplar that shielded us during a rain and […]

A Wilderness Feel Along an Industrial Path

By Ned Rozell | Geophysical Institute on Jun 16, 2017   Featured, Interior Alaska, The Arctic and Alaska Science  

A Wilderness Feel Along an Industrial Path

GOLD RUN CREEK — This clear waterway running through boreal swampland marks the farthest Cora and I will be from a highway during our summer hike along the route of the Trans-Alaska Pipeline. If we chose to bust overland southwest toward Banner Creek, we would have to cover at least nine boggy miles before we […]

Lots of Quiet Time in the Big Lonely

By Ned Rozell | Geophysical Institute on May 23, 2017   Featured, The Arctic and Alaska Science  

Lots of Quiet Time in the Big Lonely

I walked around the chain-link fence of Pump Station 12 of the Trans-Alaska Pipeline, apprehensive about the human encounter to come. It was time to send a weekly column. I needed a Wi-Fi signal or a cellular bar or two. I had walked more than a week through air devoid of communications waves. With Cora […]

Fungus Man and the Start Of It All

By Ned Rozell | University of Alaska-Fairbanks on Oct 3, 2016   Featured, Interior Alaska, The Arctic and Alaska Science  

Fungus Man and the Start Of It All

Alaskans love fungi. This was evident one Saturday when author and mycologist Lawrence Millman offered a mushroom walk at Creamer’s Field on one of the wettest days of the yellow-leaf season. “Eighty people showed up in the rain, all eager to learn about fungi,” Millman said by email after returning to his home in Massachusetts. […]

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