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Frances Beinecke

Frances Beinecke

Posted: October 8, 2009 01:05 PM

Tell Your Senators to Save Our National Parks From Global Warming

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I still remember my first visit to a national park. I was nine years old, and my family traveled to the Grand Tetons in Wyoming. For a child from Northern New Jersey, it was a revelation. I was stunned by the scale of everything: the open sky, the unending pine forests, and the peaks that towered over Jackson Lake. I spent most of my time in the saddle -- like many young girls, I was horse crazy back then -- and fell thoroughly in love with the wild western landscape. That's me in the photo.

Frances on horseback

I recently shared those memories with Channel 13, New York's local PBS station, for a video accompanying Ken Burns' fantastic documentary series, The National Parks: America's Best Idea.

I am sure many of you can recall your first visit to a national park, or perhaps a beloved hike, climb, or sunset viewpoint. Burns' documentary does a great job of illustrating how deeply the park system has become embedded in our personal, family, and national traditions.

But despite our country's valiant efforts to protect these iconic lands, the parks are now facing the most powerful threat in their history -- more potent even than industrial development, states-rights advocates or Teddy Roosevelt's original opponents.

That force is global warming. And unlike mining, drilling, or grazing, it does not observe National Park Service boundaries. It undermines every landscape in its path.

A new report released by NRDC and the Rocky Mountain Climate Organization called Parks in Peril details the ways climate change is altering the seasons, wildlife habitat, and flower-filled meadows we thought were preserved forever. It identifies the 25 most imperiled parks, and says that Glacier National Park could lose all its glaciers, Joshua Tree National Park all its Joshua trees, and Saguaro National Park all its saguaros.

The report also describes how my beloved Grand Tetons is threatened. Already, as a result of warming, its glaciers are melting, its snowpack is diminishing, and its breathtaking stands of aspen trees are dying off in something called "sudden aspen decline." The park now looks different from the one I saw when I returned at 14 for camp.

Frances hiking in Tetons

We don't have to let these treasures go. If we take steps now to curb our global warming pollution, we can preserve the values and natural resources that make our parks unique.

Back in 1916, Congress passed the National Park Service Organic Act to create the agency charged with protecting the parks.

Now it is time for Congress to pass a clean energy and climate law in order to safeguard our parks -- and all our lands -- from global warming. The House passed just such a law in June, and now the Senate is debating its version.

This Senate bill has many foes in the oil and gas industry, and passing it will require Americans to speak up in the name of our natural heritage.

Ken Burns' documentary reveals that we have an admirable history of doing just that. The series celebrates not just the beauty of the parks, but also the spirit which inspired their creation: the distinctly American idea that these places should be preserved, not for the elite or for private industry, but for everyone.

Generations of dedicated Americans fought to carve these parks into being. Yes, the effort started with the likes of John Muir and Teddy Roosevelt (see my recent post about his new biography), but it also included ordinary citizens who did the hard work of surveying, writing letters, and calling on their lawmakers to protect precious wildlands.

We need to show the same vision for preserving great landscapes. We need to be fired up by the same passion for wilderness and natural beauty. And we need to feel the same impatience to get the job done.

We need to tell our senators to pass a climate bill now, so we can preserve our national parks for generations to come.

We want to see your favorite photos from our national parks. Submit photos taken in America's national parks to NRDC's Onearth magazine.

This post originally appeared on NRDC's Switchboard blog.

 
I still remember my first visit to a national park. I was nine years old, and my family traveled to the Grand Tetons in Wyoming. For a child from Northern New Jersey, it was a revelation. I was stunn...
I still remember my first visit to a national park. I was nine years old, and my family traveled to the Grand Tetons in Wyoming. For a child from Northern New Jersey, it was a revelation. I was stunn...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cedy
not actually funny
04:46 AM on 10/11/2009
The naysayers are irrelevant, the earth is heating and we must just ignore their rhetoric.

My favorite line is the one where they say Antartica is getting more snow then in the past. Their assumption is since snow is cold and there is more of it, therefore it's not getting warmer there. Global warming is not happening, according to their simple thought stream.

They don't realize that since our oceans are warming, more water is evaporating and it ends up over Antartica, where it is still cold enough to snow there. This is typical of the ignorance that naysayers have, and a little research is all it takes to disprove their weak science.

Thanks for your article, I found it very good and look forward to another piece.
01:56 PM on 10/09/2009
Funny - Antarctic summer ice melt was the LOWEST in recorded history last year (Oct 08 - Jan. 09).

http://www.worldclimatereport.com/index.php/2009/10/06/antarctic-ice-melt-at-lowest-levels-in-satellite-era/

Maybe I'm cherry picking by focusing on Antarctica - but when you consider that's where 89% of all global land-based ice is, maybe it's not. Maybe it's cherry picking to point to melting in Greenland (10%) and glaciers (1%) as evidence for a global occurence.
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fumes
Pass The Pakalolo
09:27 PM on 10/08/2009
good news! global warming and ice melt is not our fault.. a new study unveils a precedent:

During the Middle Miocene (the time period approximately 14 to 20 million years ago), carbon dioxide levels were sustained at about 400 parts per million, which is about where we are today," Tripati said. "Globally, temperatures were 5 to 10 degrees Fahrenheit warmer, a huge amount."
In the last 20 million years, key features of the climate record include the sudden appearance of ice on Antarctica about 14 million years ago and a rise in sea level of approximately 75 to 120 feet.
More than 50 million years ago, there were no ice sheets on Earth, and there were expanded deserts in the subtropics, Tripati noted. The planet was radically different.
http://www.physorg.com/news174234562.html
10:26 PM on 10/08/2009
Damn those dinosaurs and their coal fired electric power plants. Now we know why they went extinct ... global warming caused by the dinosaurs rampant industrialization. I have an instant following ... all the rabid global warming ecofreaks who see man as guilty no matter how ridiculous.
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fumes
Pass The Pakalolo
08:29 PM on 10/08/2009
i'm afraid CO2 has reached it's trace gas tipping point (TGTP)..

and there is no way to stop it now..

the only way we can save for example the grand canyon is to cover the walls with tarpaper..

or maybe those blue tarps that we can get cheap from harbor freight!
07:32 PM on 10/08/2009
There is no man made global warming, what climate change there is, is out of our control. Deal with it and prepare accordingly.
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x76
HELP HELP I'VE BEEN BANNED
03:57 PM on 10/08/2009
Not interested in any "cap and trade" or "cap and tax" scheme -- that's a bubble waiting for the green light. I seriously doubt whether mankind could tweak any portion of the environment one way or another. And you must not have received the memo which detailed the rebranding of "global warming" to "climate change"...
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Dredd
Our government is a wartocracy.
03:54 PM on 10/08/2009
In a global crisis that picks targets indiscriminately, no one place can be saved as a benefit to all. All are in it together and so global approaches and global remedies are the way to proceed. This crisis is one we are all in together so that we sink or swim together.