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Posts by: Kate Siber

Where the Wild Things Were

Denali National Park conjures images of the eponymous peak, muscular rivers, expanses of tundra, grizzly bears, wolves, caribou...and dinosaurs? Just 12 years ago, a precocious undergraduate on a field trip discovered the first known dinosaur track in Denali. Since then, researchers have identified hundreds of trackway sites with incredible details, including little holes drilled by prehistoric birds looking for seeds and markings from 70-million-year-old raindrops. Plant fossils are so well preserved that they even exhibit damage from tiny insects. But for a long time, one thing eluded paleontologists: bones. It was the…

The Very Long Way Home

Glacier Bay National Park, in Alaska, was founded with good intentions in mind: to protect a wild land still recovering from the recession of a massive, steamrolling glacier and all the whales, otters, fish, bears and wolves that haunt the fjords and mountains. But when the monument was established in 1925, the local people, the Huna Tlingit, who had lived there since time immemorial, were not consulted. This, in fact, was not uncommon among national parks and monuments that laid claim to native lands. Thus began…

The Necessity of Desert Wanderings

This past weekend, the forecast called for snow and unseasonably low temperatures. All of Durango seemed to be eyeing the mountains for one last ski expedition. Meanwhile, I was going to the desert. Admittedly the idea gave me pause, particularly the prospect of flash floods. Despite the skies rumbling with clouds and the snow-covered grass, we departed. How bad could it be? I love these fly-by-the-seat weekends. We wound up camping at Hite under mottled skies and waking up to high clouds and perfectly cool weather.…

Finding Perspective in an Old Dance Hall

Just a few days after an election that deeply affected me, I set off into the heart of Trump country: rural Texas. Admittedly, I was a bit wary. I recognize and honor the diverse political viewpoints of our country, but this election felt like a personal attack to me. And yet, here I was on a plane to Austin... The assignment was not political in nature whatsoever. It was a feel-good story about a diverse group of music and dance aficionados who are fighting to stabilize and protect rural Texas'…

A Direct Path to Wonder

Last year, a highly unusual assignment landed in my lap, something I never would have thought to pitch: a children's book. How do you write for children? I am having a great time figuring it out. It's a project that necessitates cultivating an inner sense of curiosity and wonder and delight, which turns out to be the perfect antidote to the anxiety of these uncertain times. The book is about national parks, non-fiction, large-format, for kids ages 7-12. It will come out in 2018. The illustrations, by a…
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