Proposed Kw’tsán National Monument
Date: 03/11/2025
State: CA
Issues: Mining, Watersheds, Wild Lands
Partner: Fort Yuma Quechan Indian Tribe
Airport Origin : Yuma, AZ
Mission
Fly with the Quechan Tribe in advocacy of the protection of the sacred Kw'tsán region.
In early February 2024, the Fort Yuma Quechan Indian Tribe called on President Biden to protect their ancestral homelands in California through a national monument designation. We flew over the proposed Kw'tsán National Monument, viewing portions of the gorgeous 390,000 acres that could be protected, creating continuous, safeguarded habitat through Avi Kwa Ame, Avi Kwa Lal, Palo Verde Peak, and the Chuckwalla National Monument. The landscape is rich in historical and cultural resources, and remains central to the Quechan Tribe’s spiritual practices, being a place where song and religious ceremonies are held and where sacred sites, trail systems, artifacts, and petroglyphs connect the Tribe to their ancestors and beliefs. A national monument designation would preserve habitat and wildlife corridors for diverse species many of which are endangered, including the Desert Tortoise, Woodhouse's Toad, roadrunner, black-tailed jackrabbit, kit grebe chuckwalla, coyote, and birds who utilize the critical bird migration flyway located on the eastern side of the proposed monument.
Currently, this area is without proper and meaningful protections and in the past century, has been scarred by multiple mining projects and harmful industrial development. The Kw'tsán landscape continues to face threats - last year,
the massive Oro Cruz gold exploration project inside the proposed national monument boundary was denied, a massive victory in the Quechan Tribe’s fight to protect their ancestral homelands.
Click for photos, geo-referenced photos, videos from the flights, and EcoFlight’s Kw'tsán photo collection.