-
A three-part documentary focused on four missing and murdered Indigenous women from Montana premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in Utah.
-
Crypto mining is an energy-intensive process that analysts say emits the same amount of carbon as some small countries produce annually — and it could be the only thing keeping the 100-megawatt Hardin Generating Station active.
-
A $100,000 grant changes what the future looks like for Four Points Press, its founder says.
-
For most of its history, Yellowstone National Park was presented as untouched by humans. But Native Americans had a presence there for thousands of years before it became the world’s first national park on March 1, 1872.
-
A Crow and Salish researcher is launching an online catalogue of Indigenous plant knowledge.
-
This year the Chief Plenty Coup State Park Day of Honor in Pryor, Montana will look slightly different due to COVID. Organizers say the weekend will include food and events to celebrate Chief Plenty Coups and his eventful life.
-
A program working to preserve the Crow language received federal Covid relief funding this week that will help build the biggest Crow dictionary to date.
-
A non-profit on the Crow reservation is starting to host free spay and neuter clinics again after a year off to help alleviate the growing population of feral dogs.
-
Montana State University celebrated American Indian Heritage Day on Sept. 25 with a guest lecture from Henrietta Mann, a nationally recognized Cheyenne elder. It was part of celebrations on campuses across the state.
-
Community leaders reviewed COVID-19’s disproportionate impact to Indigenous people across Montana during a virtual roundtable on Sept. 23. They also considered ways to improve health outcomes among tribal members.