Sediment Pollution
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Gunnison River: Concrete Levy Restoration
https://eldorado.tu.org/tu-projects/gunnison-river-concrete-levy-restorationTU partnered with a landowner on restoration of a 500-foot section of bank on a popular recreational stretch of the Gunnison River that had been covered with concrete rip-rap. The armored bank was causing channel incision, and depositing sediment in undesirable location.
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Driftless Area Restoration Effort
https://eldorado.tu.org/tu-projects/driftless-area-restoration-effortGoals
The unique 24,000 square-mile unglaciated Driftless Area in the heart of the Upper Mississippi River basin is a natural resource treasure. The scenic landscape with its steep hills and rocky bluffs is home to one of the country’s most remarkable freshwater resources—over 600 coldwater limestone
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Eastern Shale Gas Development
https://eldorado.tu.org/tu-projects/eastern-shale-gas-developmentGoals
Shale gas development in the East has taken on new dimensions in recent years, where energy companies are drilling for gas in the Marcellus and Utica shales.
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Relief Ditch: A Collaborative Effort
https://eldorado.tu.org/tu-projects/relief-ditch-a-collaborative-effortGoals
This project will remove a fish barrier, restore impaired habitat, improve diversion controls, and make boating safer on the Gunnison River within the Gunnison Gorge National Conservation Area.
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Shenandoah Valley Headwaters Conservation
https://eldorado.tu.org/tu-projects/shenandoah-valley-headwaters-conservationGoals
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Klootchy Creek Logging Road Decommission and Passage Project
https://eldorado.tu.org/tu-projects/klootchy-creek-logging-road-decommission-and-passage-projectGoals
Project goals are to:
Project goals are to:
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Mabel Creek Coastal Cutthroat Project
https://eldorado.tu.org/tu-projects/mabel-creek-coastal-cutthroat-projectGoals
Project goals are:
Project goals are:
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Tongass National Forest
https://eldorado.tu.org/tu-projects/tongass-national-forestGoals
There’s nothing quite like casting a fly to schools of salmon and opportunistic Dolly Varden beneath the canopy of the southeast Alaskan rainforest. It’s primal, and a little eerie, but it’s also one of the most unique adventures an angler can undertake.
There’s nothing quite like casting a fly to schools of salmon and opportunistic Dolly Varden beneath the canopy of the southeast Alaskan rainforest. It’s primal, and a little eerie, but it’s also one of the most unique adventures an angler can undertake.
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Bear River
https://eldorado.tu.org/tu-projects/bear-riverGoals
The Bear River in Idaho, Wyoming, and Utah is the longest river in the western hemisphere that doesn’t reach the ocean—traveling a tortuous path over 500 miles from its headwaters in the Uinta Mountains before eventually emptying into the Great Salt Lake. And the fish are as unique as the river.