Listen

Description

"I hope they are a little bit more than intrigued"

The fourth in our series on the environmental and humanitarian legacy of US uranium mines in The Navajo Nation. In this episode, we cover the 1950’s and 60’s. The Atomic Age promises endless energy and domestic convenience for middle-class white America, but is sustained Navajo miners and millers working long days in uranium mines at great expense to their long-term health and that of their families. Mining companies and government agencies fail to inform the Navajo community of the hazards for decades- until it is far too late to deny.

*Content warning* for upsetting content, discussions of illness, and reference to SA.


Learn more, donate, help out:

The Multicultural Alliance for a Safe Environment

Southwest Research and Information Center (SRIC, @SRICorg on twitter)

Noel Lyn Smith at Inside Climate News (@nsmithdt and @insideclimate on twitter)

Red Nation PodcastUranium Stories: the largest nuclear disaster in US history, 43 years later. Episode link on patreon here.


Sources:
Brugge, Doug, Timothy Benally, and Esther Yazzie-Lewis, eds. The Navajo people and uranium mining. UNM Press, 2007.

Denetdale, Jennifer Nez. Reclaiming Diné History: The Legacies of Navajo Chief Manuelito and Juanita. University of Arizona Press, 2015.

Pasternak, Judy. Yellow dirt: A poisoned land and the betrayal of the Navajos. New York: Free Press, 2011.

Voyles, Traci Brynne. Wastelanding: Legacies of uranium mining in Navajo country. U of Minnesota Press, 2015.


Art and Music

Country music by Alex Black (science_party on instagram)

Ambient music by CALIFORNIA DEATH WORM (@grouchyjerk on twitter)

Cover art by Emily, check out her Etsy page at cicadaxxseason!

If you want to support the show and help pay for books and coffee, you can toss us a couple bucks at patreon.com/sludgefest. If not, no worries- all the eps are free :)

We’ll see you next time. Remember that despair is useless and I love you!