|
In honor of Women's History Month, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Legacy Management (LM) is highlighting four women who worked on the Manhattan Project: Leona Woods Libby, Norma Gross, Muriel Evans, and Carolyn B. Parker.
|
LM has completed installation of the first full row of anchor blocks to alleviate downhill slipping of two sections of a closed landfill at the Rocky Flats Site.
|
The 2019 Annual Historical Summary documents more than 100 of the most significant projects and activities completed by LM during calendar year 2019. These accomplishments demonstrate how LM is protecting public health and the environment.
|
The 2020-2025 Strategic Plan documents the strategic planning efforts of LM. The plan covers LM's mission and vision, goals and objectives, program evaluation, and performance measurement. |
|
|
Photo of the Month
Arnold Clifford, a Diné (Navajo) geobotanist, presses the seeds of an annual sunflower, Helianthus annuus, between his fingers. The seeds, which Clifford found near LM's Shiprock, New Mexico, Disposal Site, can be ground into meal and made into cakes, bread, and dumplings. They can also be used to make a dark red dye used to dye wool used in traditional Navajo rugs. As part of a vegetation study taking place at the Shiprock site on March 3, Clifford shared his knowledge with staff from LM, Navajo Nation Abandoned Mine Lands, Navajo Nation Environmental Protection Agency, and Argonne National Laboratory. The team toured the Shiprock site's lower floodplain as part of a risk assessment that includes identifying plants used by the Navajo people for food and traditional uses.
|
|
|
|