• Science Matters Colorado

  • 著者: Ahippenh
  • ポッドキャスト

Science Matters Colorado

著者: Ahippenh
  • サマリー

  • Exploring the intersection of nature and humanity in the Centennial State. Join us on Science Matters Colorado as we delve into the latest environmental science topics, trends, and stories impacting Colorado's ecosystems, communities, and natural resources.
    Ahippenh
    続きを読む 一部表示

あらすじ・解説

Exploring the intersection of nature and humanity in the Centennial State. Join us on Science Matters Colorado as we delve into the latest environmental science topics, trends, and stories impacting Colorado's ecosystems, communities, and natural resources.
Ahippenh
エピソード
  • Colorado Water Trust - Blake Mamich on Streamflow Restoration
    2025/03/20

    If you want to understand Colorado and the American Southwest, you have to understand our most limited and valuable resource - WATER. That’s why I am excited to share this conversation with Blake Mamich, a water conservation expert and Program Director for the Colorado Water Trust. The Colorado Water Trust is a homegrown nonprofit that focuses on instream water flow restoration, a topic that Blake expounds on throughout this interview. Blake has been working for the Trust since 2022, focusing on streamflow restoration and reservoir release projects.

    This interview is an overview of not just the work of the Colorado Water Trust, but of broader water policy and conservation in Colorado. I put Blake on the spot throughout this conversation, with a broad range of questions about water in Colorado. Some of the ground we cover includes the history of water rights, beneficial uses of water, key projects the Trust is currently working on, and a notable water rights acquisition currently going down on the Western slope with a price tag just under $100 million.


    While this conversation is just a drop in the bucket when it comes to the topic of water in Colorado, I am heartened to know that there is an organization out there doing deep water conservation work at a time when there is so much upheaval, specifically in terms of environmental regulation and investment in ecological health.

    _____


    Colorado Water Trust

    Donate to the Trust - Anyone who signs up for a monthly recurring donation gets a free Water Trust hat!

    Colorado Rapids - Colorado Water Trust is the Colorado Rapids official community partner this season and will be featured in their April 12th game. Come cheer on the Raptors and learn more about CWT!

    RiverBank⁠ - The main event this year is held September 30th at the Denver Botanic Gardens. Join the fun and check out the Fall displays!

    _____


    If you enjoyed today’s episode, please like the show and follow wherever you get your podcasts.

    For additional features like video, you can find transcribed versions of this and future episodes at my personal Substack, Echoing Earth.

    The music for this podcast is Siesta by Ikson, part of the “Tell Your Story” project—a library of free music for content creators. Visit ikson.com to explore the full catalog.

    Photo Credit - Yampa River / Eliza Nolte

    続きを読む 一部表示
    1 時間 3 分
  • Beyond Green - Natural Building with Tim White
    2025/02/06

    Today I am talking with Natural Builder, Tim White. I met Tim at the Crestone Energy Fair in Crestone, Colorado, an eclectic town where I was introduced to natural building materials and techniques. Tim has been in the natural building industry for almost 30 years. During the Fair, Tim gave a talk onClay Plasters, and I was hit with more truth bombs about the built environment in that one talk than I had ever been. All of it made intuitive sense, and Tim clearly had a plethora of knowledge to offer on the topic. Backed by hard science through his studies in anthropology and archaeology, Tim distilled many health and environmental issues down to a simple dichotomy: conventional building materials versus monolithic organic (natural) materials.

    Our conventional wisdom tells us that modern materials are durable, reliable, and safe. In fact, conventional building materials are toxic, highly combustible, and create over 30% of the world’s waste. The archaeological record shows that humans have used natural building materials for millenia. Their use is circular, sustainable, better for our health, and aesthetically pleasing. In fact, the techniques that Tim describes in this episode create temperature and humidity controlled environments that are livable without use of a thermostat. I invite you stoke your curiosity at the hearthside of Tim’s abundant wisdom on the benefits that natural building brings to humankind. Please enjoy.__________

    • Texas Healthy Homes
    • Tim@TexasHealthyHomes.com⁠
    • Bruce King New Carbon Architecture
    • American Clay
    • Northern Colorado Hemp Expo
    • Chris Magwood -Beam Estimator - Calculating your Home’s Carbon Footprint
    • Hemp and Block
    • Living Spaces
    • Rocky Mountain Joinery


    1:45 - What is Natural Building?

    16:15 - Applications for a Conventional Builder

    18:21 - Materials

    23:45 - Hondo Project

    30:59 - Toxins in the Built Environment

    35:51 - Optimizing Your Health

    38:56 - Problems in Conventional Building

    39:52 - Building Codes

    49:39 - Scaling Natural Building

    57:53 - Ayahuasca Temple (Spring Construction)

    1:02:45 - Unconditioning

    1:06:05 - Final Thoughts & Recs __________

    If you enjoyed today’s episode and found it insightful, please like the show and follow wherever you get your podcasts. A special thank-you to theCrestone Energy Fair for providing hands-on workshops, tours, and panel discussions on natural building.

    The music for this podcast is Siesta by Ikson, part of the “Tell Your Story” project—a library of free music for content creators. Visit ikson.com to explore the full catalog.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    1 時間 17 分
  • The Ghosts of Rocky Flats: Director Jeff Gipe on the Half-Life of Memory
    2025/01/07

    The truth is out there, but unveiling it is a meticulous and tiresome process that few choose to undertake.

    With his new documentary,Half-Life of Memory, Jeff Gipe has taken on a historical act of environmental injustice that, according to notable activists, is perpetuated to this day.

    Rocky Flats nuclear manufacturing plant operated from 1952 until 1989, when it was raided by the FBI. This was the first time a Federal warrant was served to another branch of the Federal government. The plant produced atomic "triggers", which are the explosive cores of nuclear warheads. In 1992, the plant was officially closed, marking the beginning of the remediation period.

    Rocky Flats Wildlife Refuge is now open for recreation, and plans are underway to build a recreation path that connects the refuge with Rocky Mountain National Park in the West to Rocky Mountain Arsenal in the East. This all comes at a time when Los Alamos has reopened to produce nuclear “pits”, and the US is on its way to produce 80 nuclear warheads per year by 2030.

    Has the Rocky Flats site truly been “remediated”, or is this bureaucratic sleight of hand?

    This is a story about the fallout that occurs before the global catastrophe. About the plant workers, the unwavering FBI agent who led the raid, the health officials, scientists, politicians, and those who unwittingly moved downwind of a nuclear plant and now suffer irreversible consequences.

    This is a story about the Half-Life of Memory, a film that tells difficult truths about the local consequences of global conflict. If you take nothing else from today's episode, please take this to heart -you need to see this remarkable film.

    _______

    Colorado Environmental Film Festival: 2/23 @ 3:30 pm

    https://www.halflifeofmemory.com (Rent or Own)

    The Struggle to Remember the Nuclear West by Hannah Nordhaus

    Rocky Flats Downwinders

    Rocky Flats Right to Know

    Full Body Burden - by Kristen Iversen

    _______

    If you enjoyed today’s episode and found it insightful, please share it with your friends and family. A special thank-you to the Denver Film Festival and Sie Film Center for screening Half-Life of Memory and spreading awareness on this important topic.

    The music for this podcast is Siesta by Ikson, part of the “Tell Your Story” project—a library of free music for content creators. Visit ikson.com to explore the full catalog.


    続きを読む 一部表示
    57 分

Science Matters Coloradoに寄せられたリスナーの声

カスタマーレビュー:以下のタブを選択することで、他のサイトのレビューをご覧になれます。