Fifty-three years ago, an Army helicopter pilot flying over a tundra plateau saw a group of caribou. Thinking something ...
Scientists believe it was a lightning strike that likely killed the animals at a site about 33 miles southwest of Delta ...
By Rachel Cassandra The Arctic tundra shifted this past year from capturing carbon to releasing it, which means it’s now ...
A right-of-way agreement gives Nuiqsut’s city and tribal governments and Native corporation authority over 1 million acres to ...
Rick Thoman, a climate researcher at University of Alaska Fairbanks, edited the report and said the NOAA report card also documents rapid declines in caribou herds. “Particularly the large ...
Bids for oil exploration rights in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge’s coastal plain will be opened on Jan. 10, a day later ...
The 39th U.S. president led the fight to preserve vast swaths of Alaskan wilderness. It forever changed the state and the ...
Grant Magdanz, 30, recently documented these grocery store prices during his return to Kotzebue in the Northwest Arctic ...
Across much of the world, planting more trees means more carbon is stored, and global warming is reduced. That's the thinking ...
The Rotary Club of Hot Springs Village recently heard from Harv Shelton, retired U.S. Air Force colonel, about a Christmas ...
NPCA pays tribute to President Jimmy Carter, an icon of conservation and public service and an ardent national park advocate.
When it came to protecting Mother Earth, in many respects, the late President Jimmy Carter was way ahead of his time.