
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


To call the Okefenokee swamp a treasure is to undersell just how special this watery world is. Tucked into the rural southeast corner of Georgia, this 438,000-acre swamp is one of the most ecologically intact places in our nation. Its shallow black waters not only provide habitat to a menagerie of flora and fauna, but also contain a massive peat-filled carbon sink – on a planet desperately in need of one. But now a private company with a checkered past is preparing to mine for minerals on the swamp's edge. Will a growing group of Okefenokee advocates be able to stop the mine and preserve the swamp for generations to come?
Photo credit: Joel Caldwell
Support the show
By Southern Environmental Law Center4.8
273273 ratings
To call the Okefenokee swamp a treasure is to undersell just how special this watery world is. Tucked into the rural southeast corner of Georgia, this 438,000-acre swamp is one of the most ecologically intact places in our nation. Its shallow black waters not only provide habitat to a menagerie of flora and fauna, but also contain a massive peat-filled carbon sink – on a planet desperately in need of one. But now a private company with a checkered past is preparing to mine for minerals on the swamp's edge. Will a growing group of Okefenokee advocates be able to stop the mine and preserve the swamp for generations to come?
Photo credit: Joel Caldwell
Support the show

91,297 Listeners

43,837 Listeners

32,246 Listeners

38,430 Listeners

6,881 Listeners

43,687 Listeners

9,238 Listeners

8,471 Listeners

467 Listeners

1,478 Listeners

7,718 Listeners

113,121 Listeners

56,944 Listeners

16,512 Listeners

16,525 Listeners