From project introduction: “A People’s Atlas of Nuclear Colorado invites users to explore nuclear geographies, policy issues, artistic responses, and personal and scholarly reflections on the U.S. nuclear complex. Colorado is a microcosm of the U.S. nuclear apparatus. The state has seen uranium mining, plutonium processing, underground defense posts and labs, active air force bases, nuclear testing and training, and waste monitoring and dumping/forgetting. The Atlas uses the nuclear fuel cycle as its conceptual framework and organizing principle. It documents the sites and elaborates the issues raised by mining and processing ore, refining and making nuclear components, assembling and deploying weapons, and storing, remediating, and monitoring waste.”

My contribution is: “Uranium Production’s History of Environmental Injustice – and Why it Matters Today.” 2021. In People’s Atlas of Nuclear Colorado.

All of this is curated by Sarah Kanouse and Shiloh Krupar.