| The seeds of the rapacious exploitation of the American West lie in the popular myths about the region's history, but there's not very much real history within those myths. {mp3remote}http://media.krcb.org/audio/nbr/12-30-08.mp3{/mp3remote} |   | 
 Two of the three co-authors of The American West at Risk, Howard Wilshire and Jane Neilson, are Sebastopol residents.   Wilshire (left)  was a U. S. Geological Survey research geologist for thirty-five years and now is Board Chairman of Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility.
  Two of the three co-authors of The American West at Risk, Howard Wilshire and Jane Neilson, are Sebastopol residents.   Wilshire (left)  was a U. S. Geological Survey research geologist for thirty-five years and now is Board Chairman of Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility. 
 Nielson was a U. S. Geological Survey research geologist for twenty-five years and now is President of the Sebastopol Water Information Group.
Nielson was a U. S. Geological Survey research geologist for twenty-five years and now is President of the Sebastopol Water Information Group.
  The third co-author, Richard  Hazlett, is Professor of Geology and the coordinator of the Environmental Analysis Program at Pomona College.
The third co-author, Richard  Hazlett, is Professor of Geology and the coordinator of the Environmental Analysis Program at Pomona College.
 
|   | While popular histories romanticize the "winning of the west," we now must make some hard policy decisions to keep from losing it. {mp3remote}http://media.krcb.org/audio/nbr/12-31-08.mp3{/mp3remote} At left, huge deposits of mining wastes fill the landscape near Yerrington, Nevada. Below, craters from atomic bomb tests further south in the Nevada desert. | 
 
 
The authors have developed an extensive website with photos, updates, extra chapters, quotations and other materials at LosingTheWest.com
 
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