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At the heart of everything is the water.
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A new underground seepage wall means that Las Palmas won’t stand in the way as Everglades restoration brings more water into the southern marshes.
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Fixing the Everglades is the planet’s largest ecosystem restoration project. And after 20 years, work has begun to pick up speed with a boost in state and federal spending.
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The long-awaited stimulus package approved by Congress Monday night includes $250 million for Everglades restoration.
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The Environmental Protection Agency announced Thursday it is handing over at least some of its oversight of Florida’s wetlands to the state.
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Everglades restoration is based on historical ecological trends in the river of grass, but south Florida’s climate is changing. Can the Everglades be saved? Hint, It will take a while.
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One component of Everglades restoration is aimed at getting the water clean. But what constitutes clean water in the Everglades? And how to make that happen? There’s been a lot of debate about that.
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When it comes to Everglades restoration, it is difficult to overstate how complicated everything is – and massive. The effort is aimed at recapturing billions of gallons of freshwater that is pumped out to sea, but where to put it all? One suggestion, underground.
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In Everglades National Park, parts of the river of grass are collapsing – literally. A lot of the problems have to do with massive efforts to drain and replumb Florida’s most important water resource, an ecosystem unlike any other on Earth.
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Florida leaders are calling for more money for Everglades restoration in President Donald Trump’s budget proposal unveiled this week.