The Thirty Meter Telescope is not alone in the universe of legal fights brought by environmental or cultural groups trying to stop construction of the scientific facilities in remote areas.
Scientific American has about other places in the U.S. where land uses have clashed.
In Arizona, for instance, the San Carlos Apache tribe fought a project to build three telescopes on Mount Graham, a spot the Indians used for religious ceremonies. Environmentalists also had concerned for threatened species of various kinds.
In 2005, also in Arizona, the聽Tohono O鈥檕dham Nation forced the National Science Foundation to go elsewhere when it wanted to put more telescopes on the site of the聽Kitt Peak National Observatory which was on its reservation.
But there are key differences, according to Leandra Swanner,聽a science sociologist and historian at Arizona State University in Tempe.
Scientific American author writes:
The latest fracas, however, bears some telling differences from past controversies, Swanner says. Environmental activists on Mount Graham, for example, included 鈥攁 group known to directly sabotage construction projects and lead violent rallies鈥攚hereas the Mauna Kea protest is taking place 鈥渋n the spirit of 鈥榓loha,鈥欌 or peace, according to its leaders, meaning the activists do not stand against anyone, they simply stand for their mountain. 鈥淭here is a certain community that is born with that particular kind of isolation in the Pacific that we don’t see in the sprawling desert in the Southwest鈥 where environmental activists will come and go as they please, Swanner says. 鈥淪o environmentalists on the Mauna Kea side have fallen in with the principles of aloha more squarely then I would say the environmentalists in the Mount Graham case have adopted Apache principles in passive resistance.鈥
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Patti Epler is the Editor and General Manager of Civil Beat. She’s been a reporter and editor for more than 40 years, primarily in Hawaii, Alaska, Washington and Arizona. You can email her at patti@civilbeat.org or call her at 808-377-0561.