Update: Fall of the Quartzite Eight “I did it to save lives. If we’re guilty of anything, we’re guilty of weighing human life as being worth more than that rock.” So said William Stoner, a river guide and leader of the so-called Quartzite Eight, a group of self-appointed nature-improvers who pleaded guilty last fall to blasting Quartzite Falls, a notorious Class VI rapid on central Arizona’s Salt River, inside Tonto National Forest, with 145 pounds of explosives. The action obliterated much of the falls’ namesake feature, a 30-foot-long Stoner’s explanation — that he hoped to “protect” the public by lighting a fuse — was widely panned. “The falls belonged to everybody,” says Forest Service special agent Bud Shaver. “Who made them responsible for making the wilderness safe?” |
Update: Fall of the Quartzite Eight
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