This paper analyzes a community-based project to communicate toxic dangers to future generations at Giant Mine, an abandoned gold mine near Yellowknife. Since 2013, the authors have worked with community groups, government, the Yellowknives Dene First Nation to develop a strategy for communicating the arsenic hazards at Giant Mine to future generations. Our experience suggests that any communication strategy must commemorate the multiple ways different constituents have known the mine. We also argue that any program to commemorate hazards for future generations can be a useful tool to address painful memories of historical environmental injustices associated with mine pollution
This paper contributes to a growing body of literature on the historical geographies of extraction. ...
This paper explores the history of economic, social and environmental change associated with the Pin...
The rise and abandonment of Uranium City constitutes an environmental history yet to be fully evalua...
This paper analyzes a community-based project to communicate toxic dangers to future generations at ...
For fifty years (1949–99) the now-abandoned Giant Mine in Yellowknife emitted arsenic air and water ...
The Giant Mine Remediation Plan proposes to freeze 237,000 tons of toxic arsenic trioxide dust where...
Following the discovery of gold in the Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, Canada, area in the 1930s...
Following the discovery of gold in the Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, Canada, area in the 1930s...
In the past two decades a new approach to mining history has emerged to ask, in effect, what happens...
Canada is a nation of extraction, a truism that predates its confederation and is as iconic as its f...
What happens to mining towns and their environments after they close? This question draws attention ...
What happens to mining towns and their environments after they close? This question draws attention ...
Residents in mining towns of the U.S. West face a troubling quandary in their attempts to preserve h...
Toxic is often understood in opposition to purity. Its negative valence comes from a 'modern' view o...
Mining produces enormous amounts of waste, often toxic, that requires containment, record keeping, a...
This paper contributes to a growing body of literature on the historical geographies of extraction. ...
This paper explores the history of economic, social and environmental change associated with the Pin...
The rise and abandonment of Uranium City constitutes an environmental history yet to be fully evalua...
This paper analyzes a community-based project to communicate toxic dangers to future generations at ...
For fifty years (1949–99) the now-abandoned Giant Mine in Yellowknife emitted arsenic air and water ...
The Giant Mine Remediation Plan proposes to freeze 237,000 tons of toxic arsenic trioxide dust where...
Following the discovery of gold in the Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, Canada, area in the 1930s...
Following the discovery of gold in the Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, Canada, area in the 1930s...
In the past two decades a new approach to mining history has emerged to ask, in effect, what happens...
Canada is a nation of extraction, a truism that predates its confederation and is as iconic as its f...
What happens to mining towns and their environments after they close? This question draws attention ...
What happens to mining towns and their environments after they close? This question draws attention ...
Residents in mining towns of the U.S. West face a troubling quandary in their attempts to preserve h...
Toxic is often understood in opposition to purity. Its negative valence comes from a 'modern' view o...
Mining produces enormous amounts of waste, often toxic, that requires containment, record keeping, a...
This paper contributes to a growing body of literature on the historical geographies of extraction. ...
This paper explores the history of economic, social and environmental change associated with the Pin...
The rise and abandonment of Uranium City constitutes an environmental history yet to be fully evalua...