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Today, only about 10 Ho-Chunk artists still make the baskets, and the black ash trees they are made from are becoming extinct. An exhibition of Ho-Chunk baskets is running at the Paine Art Center ...
Emerald ash borer, or Agrilus planipennis, is an invasive insect native to Asia that arrived in Minnesota around 1990. As of ...
An environmental group in northern Ontario is working to preserve black ash trees from the emerald ash borer, an invasive ...
A new initiative aims to protect black ash trees, now considered endangered, from the invasive emerald ash borer that has wrought havoc on ash tree populations. “It’s an insect that’s ...
Menominee Indian Tribe of Wisconsin member Sherri LaChapelle-Corn (Pitapanukiw) lectured on the plight of the black ash tree and taught a traditional basket weaving class for the Wisconsin Science ...
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Exhibition demonstrates tribal preservation efforts, showcases Ho-Chunk basket makerswhich is rapidly destroying black ash trees across the Upper Midwest. As the only exhibition devoted to this topic, Weaving a Legacy stands as the voice connecting the past, present, and future.
The Block Museum’s “Woven Being” is expansive yet concise, not so much a group exhibition as a mapping of diverse but related Indigenous art.
The emerald ash borer has nearly wiped out the black ash trees in Wisconsin. However, the Ho-Chunk Nation is preserving black ash tree seeds.
Environmental groups in northern Ontario are working to preserve black ash trees from the emerald ash borer, an invasive beetle threatening to wipe out the species. The Invasive Species Centre in ...
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