High Country News

Raw data

THE SEWER IS THE LAST STOP for Bozeman, Montana’s waste, but lately, it’s the first one for Blake Wiedenheft’s work. An associate professor of microbiology and immunology at Montana State University, Wiedenheft has joined other virologists, epidemiologists and immunologists as a member of the university’s COVID-19 task force.

Back in March, a colleague mentioned testing wastewater for evidence of COVID-19 in human waste. The next day, Wiedenheft drove down to Bozeman’s wastewater treatment plant to see if he could grab a sample. Given how few cases there were in the area at the time, and that 6 million gallons of water flow through the plant daily, he wasn’t sure if the virus would be detectable. But Wiedenheft immediately found evidence of it — and it kept appearing in the four samples he analyzed over the next 10

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from High Country News

High Country News3 min read
Heard Around the West
Utah lawmakers passed a bill prohibiting the state Division of Wildlife Resources from using any names for birds except the “original” assigned “Englishlanguage name,” The Salt Lake Tribune reported. The measure, if signed into law by Republican Gov.
High Country News5 min read
Tribes Lead On Wildlife Passages
THE NORTH CASCADES ELK herd is a cluster of some 1,600 animals whose domain, like so many habitats, is riven by a highway. From 2012 to 2019, Washington state records show, at least 229 elk were killed by cars along a stretch of State Route 20 in the
High Country News7 min read
Undamming the Klamath
THE KLAMATH TRIBES in southern Oregon have not seen salmon, much less been able to fish for them, for over a century now, ever since seven dams in the Klamath Basin were erected as part of PacifiCorp’s Klamath Hydroelectric Project. The dams, which w

Related Books & Audiobooks