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The Karuk Tribe has culturally burned the landscape, cyclically, since time immemorial. ... The state previously awarded $1.2 million for design and engineering of the facility.
After suppression of Indigenous cultural burning, the state agrees Northern California's Karuk Tribe may practice the burns more freely than it has in over 175 years.
The Karuk Tribe partnered with the U.S. Forest Service and other stakeholders to reintroduce traditional burning to help restore forests in the Klamath Mountains. The four-year-old project aims to ...
This photo, provided by the Karuk Tribe Department of Natural Resources, shows dead fish found on a 32-kilometer stretch of the Klamath River in northern California between Indian Creek and Seiad ...
Karuk Tribe member Jesse Coon Goodwin, top, takes a break from cleaning salmon as his 5-year-old son, Eric Goodwin, center, watches the process done by fellow Karuk.
Last year, the Yurok Tribe, Karuk Tribe and the Klamath Tribes of Oregon, along with the Klamath Water Users Association and Bureau of Reclamation, signed a memorandum of understanding to design ...
In this photo provided by the Karuk Tribe Department of Natural Resources are dead fish that are found on a 20-mile stretch of the Klamath River in northern California between Indian Creek and ...
Last week, state legislators announced they’d secured $10,000,000 for the Karuk Tribe to build a center to host cultural and prescribed fire trainings in rural northeast Humboldt County.
The Karuk Tribe says a massive wildfire burning in a remote area just south of Oregon appears to have caused the deaths of tens of thousands of Klamath River fish.
This image courtesy of the Karuk Tribe Department of Natural Resources shows dead fish at Seiad Creek, which is a small tributary of the Klamath River, near Happy Camp, Calif., Friday, Aug. 5 ...