Watch the Latest from Our Land: New Mexico’s Environmental Past, Present and Future
Discover Our Land's PBS LearningMedia Collection
We have created a collection of free resources on PBS LearningMedia with interactive middle school lesson plans built specifically around Our Land Content. Topics include New Mexico’s water resources, the impact of wildfire on forests, climate change and wildlife, careers in the environmental sciences, and environmental justice.
Watch Now
Our Land: Ancestral Connections
In 2016, the Pueblo of Santa Ana bought back 60,000 acres of their ancestral lands—lands that had been privatized and then grazed for more than a century. Now, they’re using traditional knowledge and western science to protect the lands of Tamaya Kwii Kee Nee Puu, their cultural heritage, wildlife and ecosystems, and the pueblo's future.
Our Land Weekly Newsletter
Sign up for our email newsletter which comes out every Tuesday! Enjoy previous newsletters while you wait.
Join the Our Land Newsletter
What is Our Land?
In June 2017, NMPBS debuted "Our Land: New Mexico’s Environmental Past, Present, & Future,” with longtime reporter Laura Paskus. On Our Land, NMPBS would cover challenging issues like climate change, water scarcity, pollution, forest fires, energy development, and nuclear waste, and do it in a way that would articulate a love of place and community. We also spent more than a year reporting on the military's contamination of groundwater with PFAS.
Along with broadcast and online content, we also create middle school lesson plans built specifically around Our Land content. You can find those for free on PBS LearningMedia.
To keep up with Our Land all the time, subscribe to our weekly newsletter, Our Land Weekly, and follow us on YouTube and Instagram.
Meet Laura Paskus
Laura Paskus has reported on environmental issues in New Mexico since 2002, when she began her career at High Country News. She has worked for print, online, radio, and television outlets, covering the most important environmental issues of her generation, including climate change and its impacts. She’s the author of the 2020 book, “At the Precipice: New Mexico’s Changing Climate” and is senior producer of the series on NMPBS, “Our Land: New Mexico’s Environmental Past, Present and Future.”
Over the course of her career, Paskus has freelanced for local, regional, and national outlets and also worked as managing editor for Tribal College Journal, a publication of the American Indian Higher Education Consortium; as a reporter and producer for KUNM-FM in Albuquerque; and as the environment reporter for New Mexico Political Report. In 2024, Torrey House Press will publish her new book, “Water Bodies: Love Letters to the Most Abundant Substance on Earth."
Location
1130 University Blvd. NE
Mailstop: MSC 12-7110
Albuquerque, NM 87102
Main Office: (505) 277-2121
Toll Free: 1-844-249-5386
Member Services: (505) 277-2922
NMPBS is a community service of The University of New Mexico and Albuquerque Public Schools.
Reports & Documents
Board of Directors
Closed Captioning
Policies and Reports
Privacy Policy
Translator Map
Location
1130 University Blvd. NE
Mailstop: MSC 12-7110
Albuquerque, NM 87102
Main Office: (505) 277-2121
Toll Free: 1-844-249-5386
Member Services: (505) 277-2922
NMPBS is a community service of The University of New Mexico and Albuquerque Public Schools.
Reports & Documents
Board of Directors
Closed Captioning
Policies and Reports
Privacy Policy
Translator Map
Location
1130 University Blvd. NE
Mailstop: MSC 12-7110
Albuquerque, NM 87102
Main Office: (505) 277-2121
Toll Free: 1-844-249-5386
Member Services: (505) 277-2922
NMPBS is a community service of The University of New Mexico and Albuquerque Public Schools.