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Tortoise relocation
Billy Moore, a Natural Resources Office contractor, digs out a starter burrow for a juvenile gopher tortoise Nov. 9 at Eglin Air Force Base, Fla. Approximately 831 gopher tortoises were released into a new habitat on the Eglin range in the month of October. With another 30 relocated Nov. 9, the population is more than 4,300. (U.S. Air Force photo/Samuel King Jr.)
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Tortoise relocation
Billy Moore, a Natural Resources Office contractor, digs out a starter burrow for a juvenile gopher tortoise Nov. 9 at Eglin Air Force Base, Fla. Approximately 831 gopher tortoises were released into a new habitat on the Eglin range in the month of October. With another 30 relocated Nov. 9, the population is more than 4,300. (U.S. Air Force photo/Samuel King Jr.)
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Tortoise relocation
Billy Moore, a Natural Resources Office contractor, digs out a starter burrow for a juvenile gopher tortoise Nov. 9 at Eglin Air Force Base, Fla. Approximately 831 gopher tortoises were released into a new habitat on the Eglin range in the month of October. With another 30 relocated Nov. 9, the population is more than 4,300. (U.S. Air Force photo/Samuel King Jr.)
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Tortoise relocation
A gopher tortoise, outfitted with a radio transmitter, moves into its new starter burrow Nov. 9 at Eglin Air Force Base, Fla. Approximately 831 gopher tortoises were released into a new habitat on the Eglin range in the month of October. With another 30 relocated Nov. 9, the population is more than 4,300. (U.S. Air Force photo/Samuel King Jr.)
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Tortoise relocation
A gopher tortoise, outfitted with a radio transmitter, moves into its new starter burrow Nov. 9 at Eglin Air Force Base, Fla. Approximately 831 gopher tortoises were released into a new habitat on the Eglin range in the month of October. With another 30 relocated Nov. 9, the population is more than 4,300. (U.S. Air Force photo/Samuel King Jr.)
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Tortoise relocation
A gopher tortoise moves into its new starter burrow Nov. 9 at Eglin Air Force Base, Fla. Approximately 831 gopher tortoises were released into a new habitat on the Eglin range in the month of October. With another 30 relocated Nov. 9, the population is more than 4,300. (U.S. Air Force photo/Samuel King Jr.)
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Tortoise relocation
A gopher tortoise moves into its new starter burrow Nov. 9 at Eglin Air Force Base, Fla. Approximately 831 gopher tortoises were released into a new habitat on the Eglin range in the month of October. With another 30 relocated Nov. 9, the population is more than 4,300. (U.S. Air Force photo/Samuel King Jr.)
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Tortoise relocation
A gopher tortoise is released into its new habitat Nov. 9 at Eglin Air Force Base, Fla. Approximately 831 gopher tortoises were released into a new habitat on the Eglin range in the month of October. With another 30 relocated Nov. 9, the population is more than 4,300. (U.S. Air Force photo/Samuel King Jr.)
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Tortoise relocation
Vivian Porter, a Natural Resources Office contractor, moves a gopher tortoise from a hydration bath to a transport tub prior to relocation Nov. 9 at Eglin Air Force Base, Fla. Approximately 831 gopher tortoises were released into a new habitat on the Eglin range in the month of October. With another 30 relocated Nov. 9, the population is more than 4,300. (U.S. Air Force photo/Samuel King Jr.)
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Tortoise relocation
Vivian Porter, a Natural Resources Office contractor, moves a gopher tortoise from a hydration bath to a transport tub prior to relocation Nov. 9 at Eglin Air Force Base, Fla. Approximately 831 gopher tortoises were released into a new habitat on the Eglin range in the month of October. With another 30 relocated Nov. 9, the population is more than 4,300. (U.S. Air Force photo/Samuel King Jr.)
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AF builds strong tribal relationships
Capt. Alana Kotts and Jacqueline Melcher at Oklahoma's Indian Hills PowWow in July 2021. (Courtesy photo)
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AF builds strong tribal relationships
Center right, Jacqueline Melcher, Staff Sgt. Marvis LaMere, his wife RaeLyn and their four daughters gather together for a photograph at the Indian Hills PowWow in Oklahoma City in July 2021. (Courtesy photo)
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AF builds strong tribal relationships
Jacqueline Melcher stands in the entrance courtyard of the Choctaw Cultural Center in Calera, Oklahoma, during its grand opening in July 23, 2021. The center is dedicated to exploring, preserving and showcasing the culture and history of the Choctaw people. (Courtesy photo)
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Eglin firefighters provide aid, save lives during Operation Allies Refuge
Staff Sgt. Hunter Kline and Tech. Sgt. Travis Cumpston, 96th Test Wing firefighters, provide assistance after an Afghanistan evacuee gives birth on a C-17 Globemaster III Aug. 26 at Al Udeid Air Base, Qatar. More than 10 deployed Eglin firefighters participated in the Operation Allies Refuge evacuation effort. (Courtesy photo)
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Eglin firefighters provide aid, save lives during Operation Allies Refuge
Deployed 96th Test Wing firefighters helped bring baby, Naseerah, meaning Helper, into the world aboard a C-17 Globemaster III Aug. 26 at Al Udeid Air Base, Qatar. More than 10 deployed Eglin firefighters participated in the Operation Allies Refuge evacuation effort. (Courtesy photo)
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211026-F-XO639-1033
Crews remove soil from the dig site area by moving it into barrels to dispose of once the zero valent iron is applied to the soil. The holes have to be drilled 40 feet in depth before pouring approximately 30 gallons of zero valent iron to begin the remediation process. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman David Phaff)
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211026-F-XO639-1001
Contracted crew drill holes in key locations to pour zero valent iron in to help the area recover from past environmental hazards. Zero valent iron is the most commonly used zerovalent metal (ZVM) for environmental remediation. ZVI is typically applied as a reductant and is capable of transforming (degrading) or sequestering a variety of contaminants found in groundwater and soil. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman David Phaff)
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Native Seed Program
A thick grove of Honey Mesquite shrubs block the path of a Melrose Air Force Range resident in New Mexico. The Honey Mesquite is one of several invasive species that were limiting Air Force Special Forces training on MAFR. Air Force Natural Resource specialists are currently addressing the problem using a variety of methods including the Native Seed Program which reintroduces native seeds and plants to the range to improve the usability of the 70,000-acre training area. (Courtesy photo)
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Native Seed Program
A natural resource crew inspects an area of invasive Honey Mesquite shrubs in the training area of Melrose Air Force Range in Eastern New Mexico. Air Force Natural Resource specialists are currently addressing the invasive species problem using a variety of methods including the Native Seed Program which reintroduces native seeds and plants to the range to improve the usability of the 70,000-acre training area. (Courtesy photo)
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Native Seed Program
Melrose Air Force Range in Eastern New Mexico was once covered by training-friendly native grassland like the area pictured here. Species like the Honey Mesquite shrub have invaded the range and made training much more difficult and, in some areas, impossible. Air Force Natural Resource specialists are currently addressing the problem using a variety of methods including the Native Seed Program which reintroduces native seeds and plants to the range to improve the usability of the 70,000-acre training area. (Courtesy photo)
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