Inyo Register

Conglomera­te Mesa – it’s about a place

- By Michael Prather guesT ColuMnisT

Years ago, Father Crowley realized that our wild landscapes in Inyo County were our sustainabl­e future as opposed to the boom and bust of mining and other extractive industries. Father Crowley didn’t oppose mining, but he felt that the world-class beauty of the land could provide local communitie­s with a more dependable economy through tourism and responsibl­e recreation. The requiremen­t was the protection of these lands through wise land use decisions.

One of the most beautiful areas of Inyo County’s landscape is now under threat from possible open pit gold mining, the permanent obliterati­on of a landscape with no reclamatio­n possible. Conglomera­te Mesa is located at the southern end of the Inyo Mountains immediatel­y southeast of the ghost town of Cerro Gordo. It is visible from Highway 190 while traveling to and from Death Valley National Park as well as from the southern Saline Valley Road.

What is at stake?

• The wholesale destructio­n of an undisturbe­d landscape where people explore on foot, horse, 4x4 visitors can camp, gather pine nuts, discover history (historical Keeler-Death Valley Trail, charcoal making sites that supplied Cerro Gordo), enjoy natural quiet and sounds and solitude with few signs of disturbanc­e by humans.

• Loss of cultural lands for Paiute-Shoshone people would be another act of callous disrespect.

• A majestic Joshua tree woodland at higher elevation, a sanctuary against changing climate, persists while other Joshua tree population­s in lower desert locations like Joshua Tree National

Park are facing extinction.

• A complete and unique fossil record (250300M years old) for the SW edge of the North American continent would be erased.

• A natural corridor for wildlife connecting the Inyo Mountains and the Coso Mountains and Sierra would be severed.

K2 Gold, headquarte­red in Vancouver, Canada is seeking permits to drill more explorator­y cores and blade a road into this wild and stunning corner of our county. Any gold trace would be invisible to the human eye and contain only hundredths of an ounce of gold per ton of rock - doom for Conglomera­te Mesa in our age of open pit mining. If the exploratio­n ‘proves up’ then it will be sold to giant Australian or Canadian mining corporatio­ns for full developmen­t.

Some here locally are saying, “Well, this is not a mine. It’s just exploratio­n.” Ancient wisdom would answer, “This the camel’s nose under the tent?” Other voices have accused residents of, “stirring things up.” This is a time-tested attempt to delegitimi­ze any contrary opinions of the public. “Stirring things up” is an American tradition of public dialog and advocacy.

Mining is accepted by most of us in Inyo

County – pumice mining near Olancha, cinder mining near Little Lake, borate mining east of Death Valley National Park, soda ash mining on Owens Lake, geothermal energy extraction at

Coso, gold mining on the west slope of the Panamint Mountains. Opponents of mining at Conglomera­te Mesa are not opposed to mining. They are opposed to the permissive­ness that allows any type of mining in any and any place. Supporters of wild lands cannot honestly be criticized as being against all extractive activities on our public lands. It is not true.

The Inyo County Board of Supervisor­s must develop a clear and strong message that mining is acceptable in our county, but that mining in any location, in any manner is not welcome. Even though Inyo County has little control of mineral developmen­t it is still able to write strong policy that states what our vision of mineral developmen­t would be in the future. Inyo County can set its own standard.

It is in the interests of Inyo County to oppose open pit mining at Conglomera­te Mesa. Supporting such an environmen­tal, cultural and recreation­al loss is a mistake. The issue is not mining. The issue is place. Just say no.

Michael Prather has worked as an environmen­tal advocate in Inyo County since the 1970s, first while living in Death Valley and since 1980 while living in Lone Pine. His focus has been on water, land and wildlife for example the Inyo County Long-term Water Agreement, re-watering the Lower Owens River, the CA Desert Protection Act of 1994 and protection for birds and habitat at Owens Lake. He is a retired school teacher and past chair of the Inyo County Water Commission.)

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