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THIS WEEK IN
CALIFORNIA WILD

Summer 2000
Vol. 53:3

summer 2000 cover

Willows along the lakeshore mark the route of Lee Vining Creek along the west side of Mono Lake.

Photograph by Jim Stimson.

Departments
Here at the Academy
TLC for Scorpions
Dave Brian Butvill

Horizons
California's New Flora
Blake Edgar

Counterpoints in Science
Rich Land, Poor Land
Jerold M. Lowenstein

Features
Diamond's Hope
Jared Diamond, science’s multi- faceted storyteller, talks about everything from cells to civilizations, including his guarded optimism for humanity’s future.

The Selfish Dragonfly
Over the 200-plus million years they have been on Earth, dragonflies have evolved some startling ways to guarantee their survival.
Edward S. Ross

At Home in the
Natural World

Naturalist's Almanac
What to Look for This Summer
Liese Greensfelder

Skyguide
Messier's List
Bing F. Quock

Not available online:
Smarter than the Average Tourist
Rangers used to encourage Yosemite’s black bears to eat garbage and meet visitors. Now they try to train bears and people to view each other from a distance.
Michael J. Ybarra

Mono Lake Rising
After Los Angeles stopped taking water from surrounding creeks, Mono Lake’s natural habitats began to revive. But the lake still has to sort itself out.
Jane Braxton Little

By the Light of a Star
From radio waves to gamma rays, astronomers scan the spectrum to explore the universe.
Neil de Grasse Tyson, Charles Liu, and Robert Irion

Letters to the Editor
Riding on Thin Ice
Ticks and Lizards

Reviews
"Point Reyes Visions"