MKT PAID Have you heard?

0

“When Amalia Salas Casales was a child, those waters ran clear. She moved through a vast network of canals lined with chinampas — the floating agricultural islands that once fed Mexico City. She learned to cook with native ingredients harvested from the lake system, following recipes passed down through generations — some made with species that have since disappeared. The water was clean enough to drink, the ecosystem abundant with life.”

Tracy L. Barnett, Writer

Mexico’s City’s Xochimilco chinampas agricultural canals are polluted and at risk of disappearing, but 89-year-old activist Abuela Amalia and a new summit of community leaders are determined to save them.

Protests continue in Guadalajara, despite the recent firing of the head of Guadalajara’s water agency amid an ongoing water crisis.


Don’t miss any news. Click here to read all of today’s stories!

The activists say that human and animal hair has the capacity to separate hydrocarbons from water, with one kilogram of hair capable of cleaning up 8 liters of oil.


PHOTO OF THE DAY

Sunset cloud over Jocotepec | Photo by Brett Phillips

If you’d no longer like to receive emails from Mexico News Daily, you can unsubscribe here.