Friday Quote— Timothy Egan
A product of the late ice age, the glacier looked old and tired on this hot day. There was a sense of loss, some people said, at watching this giant recoil. There were oohs and aahs but also more hushed tones, expressions of fear that the big land was somehow diminished, a little less wild. Just a few years ago, the spot where these tourists stood, on dry ground marked by Park Service signs, had been under ice.
Alaska is changing by the hour. From the far north, where higher seas are swamping native villages, to the tundra around Fairbanks, where melting permafrost is forcing some roads and structures to buckle in what looks like a cartoon version of a hangover, to the rivers of ice receding from inlets, warmer temperatures are remaking the Last Frontier State.
—- New York Times contributor and Gonzaga Prep graduate Timothy Egan, from a 2005 article titled “The Race To Alaska Before It Melts.” His latest book, “The Big Burn: Teddy Roosevelt and the Fire that Saved America” is available at Auntie’s.
* This story was originally published as a post from the marketing blog "Down To Earth." Read all stories from this blog