Amargosa River, California | Patrick Donnelly
Protect critical water supply of the Amargosa River
The Amargosa River is a ribbon of life flowing through one of the hottest and driest places in North America. Flowing mostly underground, the river provides critical water and habitat for a variety of plants and animals — many of which can’t be found anywhere else on earth.
The Amargosa River is a living part of the ancestral and current homelands of the Timbisha Shoshone, Southern Paiute, Pahrump Paiute, and Chemehuevi Tribes. To this day, Indigenous communities and low-income and rural communities, in both Nevada and California, rely on the River’s groundwater as a primary drinking source. But proposed mining near the headwaters of the Amargosa and along the borders of Ash Meadows National Wildlife Refuge threaten the groundwater that sustains the River, putting local communities and already endangered species at risk.
Without its water, this fragile web of life collapses. But the Department of the Interior (DOI) has an opportunity to approve a mineral withdrawal for approximately 309,000 acres of Bureau of Land Management land surrounding Ash Meadows, that would protect the region from new mining for up to 20 years.
Please join us in urging the DOI to approve a proposed mineral withdrawal in the next 12 months before temporary protection expires. Implementing a 20-year mineral withdrawal is an important and urgent step toward protecting the critical groundwater that sustains irreplaceable biodiversity at Ash Meadows and supports the communities of the Amargosa River Basin, including the Timbisha Shoshone Tribe.
At the same time, we ask you to urge Congress to permanently protect Ash Meadows, Amargosa Valley, and the sovereign lands and sacred waters of the Timbisha Shoshone Tribe by designating the Ash Meadows National Conservation Area. Establishing a National Conservation Area is urgently necessary to ensure durable protection of groundwater resources, biodiversity, cultural values, and rural and Tribal communities across the Amargosa River Basin.
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