|

Home
Page
/ Wolf
Centre
/ Adopt-a-Wolf
Membership
/ WWUK
Wolves
/ Join
Wolf Watch UK
/ Visiting
The Sanctuary
/ Payments
& Donations
/ Contact
Us
/ Wolf
Videos
/ Q&A
/ History
/ Wilderness
Goods For Sale
/ Notice
Board
/ Meet
The Team
/ What
People Have Said
/ Photography
Days
/ Links
/ Wolf
News
/ Loopy
Files
/ Notes
From Tony
/ Wolf
Learning Course

November
2009

Wolf
Biologist Killed In Plane Crash in Denali National Park
A
noted Alaskan wolf biologist has been killed in a plane crash in a
remote area of Denali National Park and Preserve. The pilot, though
he suffered burns, was able to walk out and alert authorities.
Dr.
Gordon Haber and pilot Dan McGregor had left Wednesday for a flight
over the northern end of the park to monitor wolf packs. When the
Cessna 185 didn't return on schedule that evening, authorities were
notified and an aerial search was mounted by the National Park
Service and Alaska State Troopers.
Wreckage
of the single-engine plane was spotted from the air Thursday
afternoon on a steep slope west of the East Fork of the Toklat River,
approximately seven miles north of the Denali Park Road, park
officials said. "A search plane was able to land later in the
afternoon on the river bar approximately one-half mile below the
crash site, and an Alaska State Trooper hiked to the scene to
investigate. The aircraft was substantially damaged by the impact and
the post crash fire, but the trooper was able to determine the
presence of human remains before increasing darkness prevented his
further investigation," they said.
The
35-year-old McGregor told authorities that after the crash he walked
to the Denali Park Road where he found two campers at the Igloo Creek
Campground who drove him to his home, according to a park release.
Once home, the pilot called his family to let them know he was OK,
and the authorities, the release said.
The
National Park Service was notified of his situation about 10:30 p.m.
Thursday (October 15 2009).
"McGregor
was alert and in good spirits, talking to friends and family via
cell phone while being treated and waiting for the air ambulance to
arrive from Fairbanks," a park release said. "It is
estimated that he walked approximately 20 miles during his ordeal. He
will be interviewed later by National Transportation Safety Board
(NTSB) personnel as part of the accident investigation. McGregor has
confirmed that remains found at the crash site are those of Gordon
Haber. Rangers are stationed at the remote crash site overnight, in
order to secure the scene prior to arrival of NTSB investigators on Friday."
Dr.
Haber, 67, who has studied Denali's wolves since 1966, long had been
critical of Alaska's wolf management plans, particularly their
hunting and trapping regulations, according to John Quinley, the Park
Service's assistant regional director for communications in Alaska.
He
has been an advocate for stronger protection of wolves, particularly
on the northern and eastern boundaries of Denali, which in various
configurations have been open to trapping in recent years, outside
the parks boundary," the Park Service spokesman said
Thursday afternoon. "His concern was, in part, that those wolves
on the eastern end, some of the packs, have been studied going way
way back, back to when (Adolph) Murie was working in Denali, and he
saw a danger if those long-studied packs were eliminated by trapping
or hunting that thats a significant loss for the park and park visitors.
"He
also saw that some of those eastern wolves, theyre protected
in the park and they wander around particularly close to people at
various times of years and they wander outside the park, in the
spring, and if they wander close to people they wind up dead, in
traps particularly," said Mr. Quinley.
Source
@ National Parks Traveler
Haber
was passionate about wolves and their place in the wilderness, once
stating they enliven the northern mountains, forests, and
tundra like no other creature, helping to enrich our own stay on the
planet simply by their presence as other highly advanced societies in
our midst. - Dr Gordon Haber.


Email
WWUK
Photography
by Chris Cray / Tony Haighway
©
Wolf Watch UK
Home
Page
/ Wolf
Centre
/ Adopt-a-Wolf
Membership
/ WWUK
Wolves
/ Join
Wolf Watch UK
/ Visiting
The Sanctuary
/ Payments
& Donations
/ Contact
Us
/ Wolf
Videos
/ Q&A
/ History
/ Wilderness
Goods For Sale
/ Notice
Board
/ Meet
The Team
/ What
People Have Said
/ Photography
Days
/ Links
/ Wolf
News
/ Loopy
Files
/ Notes
From Tony
/ Wolf
Learning Course |