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  • Colorado Gators Reptile Park located 17 miles north of Alamosa, CO. on Highway 17.
    colorado_gators008.JPG
  • Colorado Gators Reptile Park located 17 miles north of Alamosa, CO. on Highway 17.
    colorado_gators009.JPG
  • Colorado Gators Reptile Park located 17 miles north of Alamosa, CO. on Highway 17.
    colorado_gators006.JPG
  • Colorado Gators Reptile Park located 17 miles north of Alamosa, CO. on Highway 17.
    colorado_gators005.JPG
  • Colorado Gators Reptile Park located 17 miles north of Alamosa, CO. on Highway 17.
    colorado_gators003.JPG
  • Colorado Gators Reptile Park located 17 miles north of Alamosa, CO. on Highway 17.
    colorado_gators004.JPG
  • Colorado Gators, personal
    colorado_gators002.JPG
  • Colorado Gators Reptile Park located 17 miles north of Alamosa, CO. on Highway 17.
    colorado_gators001.JPG
  • Colorado Gators Reptile Park located 17 miles north of Alamosa, CO. on Highway 17.
    colorado_gators007.JPG
  • CREDIT: Steven St. John for The Wall Street Journal<br />
"ANIMAS"<br />
<br />
Life along the Animas River just south of Durango Colorado on Tuesday, March 22, 2016. Six months after an EPA crew triggered a toxic spill at a Colorado gold mine, state and local officials downstream are scrambling to prepare for a new emergency as spring snow melt threatens to stir up lead and other contaminants in a river used for drinking water.
    ANIMAS-22.JPG
  • CREDIT: Steven St. John for The Wall Street Journal<br />
"ANIMAS"<br />
<br />
A discolored rock sits above the water line in the Animas River on Tuesday, March 22, 2016. Six months after an EPA crew triggered a toxic spill at a Colorado gold mine, state and local officials downstream are scrambling to prepare for a new emergency as spring snow melt threatens to stir up lead and other contaminants in a river used for drinking water.
    ANIMAS-13.JPG
  • CREDIT: Steven St. John for The Wall Street Journal<br />
"ANIMAS<br />
<br />
Brian Dils 17-year-old daughter Saige turns on water for the horses on the family land in Aztec New Mexico on Tuesday March 23, 2016.
    ANIMAS-21.JPG
  • CREDIT: Steven St. John for The Wall Street Journal<br />
"ANIMAS<br />
<br />
Brian Dils 15-year-old daughter Brilie tends to the animals on the family land in Aztec New Mexico on Tuesday March 23, 2016.
    ANIMAS-17.JPG
  • CREDIT: Steven St. John for The Wall Street Journal<br />
"ANIMAS<br />
<br />
Brian Dils tends to the animals on his family land in Aztec New Mexico on Tuesday March 23, 2016. Dils and his family depend on water from the Animas River and they are concerned the lack of EPA testing will expose them to harmful levels of lead as more toxic sediment gets stirred up in the spring runoff.
    ANIMAS-15.JPG
  • CREDIT: Steven St. John for The Wall Street Journal<br />
"ANIMAS"<br />
<br />
Rancher Lin Blancett, whose cows had to be evacuated because of the Gold King Mine spill, rides threw his heard checking on new born caves on Tuesday, March 22, 2016
    ANIMAS-11.JPG
  • CREDIT: Steven St. John for The Wall Street Journal<br />
"ANIMAS"<br />
<br />
Rancher Lin Blancett, whose cows had to be evacuated because of the Gold King Mine spill, stands along the Animas River on Tuesday, March 22, 2016
    ANIMAS-09.JPG
  • CREDIT: Steven St. John for The Wall Street Journal<br />
"ANIMAS"<br />
<br />
Rancher Lin Blancett, whose cows had to be evacuated because of the Gold King Mine spill, stands along the Animas River on Tuesday, March 22, 2016
    ANIMAS-08.JPG
  • CREDIT: Steven St. John for The Wall Street Journal<br />
"ANIMAS<br />
<br />
Brian Dils tends to the animals on his family land in Aztec New Mexico on Tuesday March 23, 2016. Dils and his family depend on water from the Animas River and they are concerned the lack of EPA testing will expose them to harmful levels of lead as more toxic sediment gets stirred up in the spring runoff.
    ANIMAS-20.JPG
  • CREDIT: Steven St. John for The Wall Street Journal<br />
"ANIMAS<br />
<br />
Brian Dils tends to the animals on his family land in Aztec New Mexico on Tuesday March 23, 2016. Dils and his family depend on water from the Animas River and they are concerned the lack of EPA testing will expose them to harmful levels of lead as more toxic sediment gets stirred up in the spring runoff.
    ANIMAS-18.JPG
  • CREDIT: Steven St. John for The Wall Street Journal<br />
"ANIMAS"<br />
<br />
Rancher Lin Blancett, whose cows had to be evacuated because of the Gold King Mine spill, at his home next to the Animas River on Tuesday, March 22, 2016
    ANIMAS-12.JPG
  • .Teenagers from Colorado on a bible retreat play baseball in an alfalfa field at Ghost Ranch for a story on artist Georgia O'Keeffe's legacy in New Mexico....
    sstjohhn_singles008.tif
  • .Artist Benita Brennan applies green paint to Cliff Matthews' face during a body-painting jam at the Embassy Suites on Friday. Matthews' floral top-knot was contributed by hairstylist Lorenzo Colorado. The jam, in which artists used the bodies of volunteer models as living canvases, is part of the U.S. Body Painting Competition that continues through Sunday.
    sstjohhn_singles004.tif
  • bear_colorado.jpg
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Albuquerque Freelance photographer Steven St. John

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