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marmar

(77,097 posts)
Mon May 21, 2012, 02:50 PM May 2012

How Rural America Got Fracked: The Environmental Nightmare You Know Nothing About


from TomDispatch:



How Rural America Got Fracked
The Environmental Nightmare You Know Nothing About

By Ellen Cantarow


If the world can be seen in a grain of sand, watch out. As Wisconsinites are learning, there’s money (and misery) in sand -- and if you’ve got the right kind, an oil company may soon be at your doorstep.

March in Wisconsin used to mean snow on the ground, temperatures so cold that farmers worried about their cows freezing to death. But as I traveled around rural townships and villages in early March to interview people about frac-sand mining, a little-known cousin of hydraulic fracturing or “fracking,” daytime temperatures soared to nearly 80 degrees -- bizarre weather that seemed to be sending a meteorological message.

In this troubling spring, Wisconsin’s prairies and farmland fanned out to undulating hills that cradled the land and its people. Within their embrace, the rackety calls of geese echoed from ice-free ponds, bald eagles wheeled in the sky, and deer leaped in the brush. And for the first time in my life, I heard the thrilling warble of sandhill cranes.

Yet this peaceful rural landscape is swiftly becoming part of a vast assembly line in the corporate race for the last fossil fuels on the planet. The target: the sand in the land of the cranes. ..................(more)

The complete piece is at: http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/175544/tomgram%3A_ellen_cantarow%2C_the_new_eco-devastation_in_rural_america/#more



5 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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How Rural America Got Fracked: The Environmental Nightmare You Know Nothing About (Original Post) marmar May 2012 OP
thanks I owe a May 2012 #1
horrific environmental devastation Roy Ellefson May 2012 #2
Hoffman Hills State Recreation Area--Dunn County Wisconsin Roy Ellefson May 2012 #3
That looks incredibly beautiful Marrah_G May 2012 #5
Once you poison the water...you poison everything. Marrah_G May 2012 #4
 

Roy Ellefson

(279 posts)
2. horrific environmental devastation
Mon May 21, 2012, 05:13 PM
May 2012

Great article and an issue that needs to be pushed. Hydraulic fracking IS an environmental disaster that deserves the attention it is receiving. However, frac sand mining is every bit an environmental disaster waiting to happen. The article does not adequately describe the horrific devastation these mines inflict on the landscape. To a casual observer and even some of the locals--frac sand mines are seen as nothing more than a gravel pit...that is, until you see one. Think mountaintop mining but with smaller hills.

Here's a link to the Save the Hills alliance.[link:http://wisair.wordpress.com/|

 

Roy Ellefson

(279 posts)
3. Hoffman Hills State Recreation Area--Dunn County Wisconsin
Mon May 21, 2012, 05:19 PM
May 2012

This is one area that for now was saved from a frac sand mine. They wanted to mine right next to a state recreation area.

[link:|

Marrah_G

(28,581 posts)
4. Once you poison the water...you poison everything.
Mon May 21, 2012, 05:24 PM
May 2012

Wisconsin should be protecting their precious rivers and lakes.

Shame on the federal and state governments who are allowing this. They will kill entire ecosystems in their quest for money and power, betraying the very people they are supposed to represent.

Water is our very basis of life. Once that is fouled.... nothing can survive.

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