News

"It's a special day for all Native Americans,” said Blair Listening Thunder Gopher at the unveiling ceremony, where community ...
Souta Calling Last, left, and Macie Ahlgren cut the ribbon at the opening of the Bear Gulch Pictographs visitor center on ...
River float honored the implementation of Cultural Waterways Ordinance 113‑A, a 2021 law passed by the Confederated Salish ...
The University of Montana's Margery Hunter Brown Indian Law Clinic started to create the Indian Law Portal and is one of the ...
Chumash descendants raise their long paddles to the sky as they arrive by tomol at Scorpion Anchorage, Limuw (Santa Cruz Island) in December 2014. (Karen ...
Along the Klamath River in Northern California, where logging companies once cut ancient redwood trees, vast tracts of land have been returned to the Yurok Tribe in a years-long effort that tribal ...
Along the Klamath River in Northern California, where logging companies once cut ancient redwood trees, vast tracts of land have been returned to the Yurok Tribe in a years-long effort that tribal ...
Along the Klamath River in Northern California, where logging companies once cut ancient redwood trees, vast tracts of land have been returned to the Yurok Tribe in a years-long effort that tribal ...
Scientists say restoring wocus will provide valuable habitat for shortnose and lost river suckerfish, also known as c’waam and koptu, which are another important first food for the Klamath people.
Tribes including the Hoopa, Karuk, Klamath, Modoc, and Yurok thrived in this bountiful and beautiful watershed for thousands of years, with the river providing both sustenance and ritual.
Klamath Tribes member Jeff Mitchell, who's served his tribe in various capacities for over 50 years, said his people had been raising awareness of the issue for nearly two decades before that.