Environment
ArchiveRecord low snowfalls have made national news, but it came as no surprise for the characters in the End of Snow, from Day鈥檚 Edge Productions.
On March 21, the Department of Interior will hold the largest auction of offshore leases in U.S. history, including all unleased areas on the Gulf of Mexico鈥檚 outer continental shelf. But do energy extractors actually want such land and waters?
A legal complaint says the three leaders are in violation of a 20-year-old law and casts doubt on whether they have any authority at all
After nine years and two presidents, it's not big environmental groups with the best shot at defeating the pipeline鈥攊t's a bunch of well-organized locals.
A new report suggests that the answer is no, which could impact hunted species across the U.S. and Canada
The Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation works with local property owners and agencies to buy land and turn it over to the public
Temperatures were brutally low at this year鈥檚 running of the 300-mile competition, and one frostbitten competitor may lose his hands and feet. Is this just the price of playing a risky game, or does something need to change?
She was a pioneer for women in the industry
In seasons with little snow, people make fewer trips to the mountains, which has a huge impact on local economies
Efforts to manage human waste in national parks have failed miserably. Now a creative scientist may have found an elegant remedy.
As sea levels rise and megastorms become more frequent and intense, answering that question might be the key to preserving coastal life as we know it
Lies, damned lies, and "fantasy" White House budget proposals
That鈥檚 2 percent of overall GDP鈥攑utting it on par with other major economy-drivers (and larger than oil and mining).
As rescuers worked to save seven climbers, television crews live-streamed everything. The question is: should they?
From Tyax 国产吃瓜黑料s, Switchback Entertainment, and MBTA, and Norco Bicylces, Respect takes a critical look at backcountry mountain biking.
From filmmaker Justin Clifton and Chris Cresci, A Line In The Sand is an animated video which illustrates the value and power of public lands.
Navajo climber Len Necefer is using social media to remind us of our wild places' indigenous histories
A very serious look at the most fatal critters in the country
The future of the West depends on whether we can keep it in check
The Alaska senator is gambling with America's most pristine lands鈥攁nd winning
Shrinking the national monuments was just the tip of the iceberg
Companies focused on resource extraction now have access to huge chunks of the former national monument
His fishing boat washed ashore Tuesday morning in France. A massive search is underway.
The r茅sum茅 of P. Daniel Smith, including a troubling work history
Would you a take a year of your life to get outside, work hard on public lands, and learn some skills, for a minimal stipend? Some members of Congress鈥攆rom both parties鈥攁re betting you might.
Brands, activists, and politicians gathered at the start of the Outdoor Retailer trade show to rally around public lands
A new poll of eight Western states reveals that most people are actually on the same page about public lands, renewable energy, and the importance of outdoor recreation
Cliven Bundy's claim to federal land has only whiffs of legal merit. This lawsuit is all about politics.
One acre inside Grand Teton National Park is for sale for $5 million. Its future says a lot about our national parks, Jackson Hole, and the tension between preserving history and budding tourism.
With his office's insult-laden response to the resignation of the NPS Advisory Board, the secretary proves that, like his boss, he's not above mudslinging
The big cat might be officially extinct鈥攂ut it鈥檚 also making a comeback
In Arizona, the Verde River was running dry, so Kim Schonek devised a plan to save it with the help of everyone's favorite malted beverage.
A semi-detailed list of everything we know (and we still have plenty of questions) about possible public land closures starting tomorrow if the lights go out for the feds
We care about public lands, and that's why we're joining a discussion about how to preserve them at the Outdoor Retailer show
Upon arriving in northeast Oregon, conservationist Brian Kelly was given two job offers; cook or sheep herder. He took the obvious choice and spent the next year shepherding a herd of sheep through the landscapes surrounding Hells Canyon.
10 tips from a Pulitzer Prize鈥搘inning photojournalist on how to nail the perfect shot
A plan to bring some 200 bears to Washington's North Cascades was reportedly stopped by the Department of the Interior, jeopardizing the species' recovery.
EnergyNet, an online auction company from Amarillo, Texas, is set to make a fortune from oil and gas leases under the Trump administration. And good luck finding a way to protest.
As governor, Mitt Romney was an environmental champion. Presidential candidate Romney, however, fell in line with the GOP. What kind of Utah senator would he be if he succeeds Orrin Hatch?
To close out 2017, the president chipped away at protections meant to keep public lands, waters, and wildlife safe
Within the understaffed offices of the DOI, is any work actually getting done?
As the Thomas Fire scorched hundreds of thousands of acres and forced communities to evacuate, Stuart Palley and other fire photographers rushed to the front lines
Part of the former monument could be designated Wilderness鈥攁nd you have a say
Probably not this time. Eva Holland looks at how a disturbing wildlife image went viral鈥攇enerating anguish, anger, and confusion about the undeniably warming Arctic.
Though gear company Millican travels across the globe seeking inspiration for their products, they know adventure lies right out the back door in the Lake District.
The family has long argued that the government was willing to bend the rules to put the family away鈥攏ow a judge seems to be listening
In a world where our time and attention are fractured into smaller and smaller bits, legendary biologist and runner Bernd Heinrich is a throwback, a man who has carved a deep groove in his patch of Maine woods
The Story of Place from The Grand Canyon Trust follows filmmaker Ace Kvale, writer Craig Childs, and Zuni tribe member Jim Enote. They鈥檙e on a journey to help elucidate this region鈥檚 cultural significance in order to protect it from resource extraction.聽
From filmmaker and storm chaser Dustin Farrell, Transient is a collection of shots taken over the summer of 2017.
The GOP tax-reform package will save companies billions. But it likely came at the cost of Bears Ears, Grand Staircase-Escalante, and ANWR.
And is that even legal?
On a 5 month residency with the Native land's advocacy ground聽Utah Dine Bikeyah聽near Bears Ears National Monument, filmmaker Alisha Anderson had the opportunity to make a series of films about the tribal聽connection to nature.
Did Donald Trump "steal" public land when he shrunk two Utah national monuments on Monday? Depends on who you ask.
On a good day, driving down I-405 here in Los Angeles is considered the commute from hell. Yesterday, things got a little more literal.
In the last 18 months, long-simmering disputes have boiled over amid claims of trespassing, political meddling, government bullying, and retaliation. Some worry that what鈥檚 happening there may harbinger what鈥檚 to come on public land across the nation. It鈥檚 enough to call the situation, well, you know.
REI and the North Face have joined the Ventura-based gear maker in standing up for our public lands
The fight over Utah's Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante national monuments is just getting started
An in-depth look at the GOP's full-scale assault on our 640 million acres of public land
Two bipartisan bills show how the left and the right can converge on public land policy
Early in his political career, the interior secretary irked fellow Republicans with his willingness to stand up for conservation. Things have changed, and whether you love or hate his ideas, know this: he鈥檚 one of the few Trump-era cabinet secretaries with the juice to make things happen, and he鈥檚 got the boss鈥檚 back.
Donald Trump just reduced Bears Ears by nearly 85 percent. Here's what you're saying.
Get ready for lawsuits. The five tribal nations that supported the formation of the monument say they will respond with legal action and continued collaboration.
Researchers at the University of Montana found that nearby towns dependent on tourist dollars stand to lose millions
New documents suggest that President Trump's Monday announcement will involve downsizing the Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante national monuments by nearly a million acres each
Arguments against opening the last great American wilderness to oil companies tend to get emotional, but the best argument may be the cost
Filmmaker聽Adrien Mauduit聽will always remember聽October 2017. For three consecutive mornings, from聽October 17 to 19,聽he captured the sun rising over France's Jura Mountains to create this film Rise.
A team of scientists entered a glass bubble in the desert to live for two years cut off from society. Things didn't go as planned.
From filmmaker Colin Arisman and the Wilderness Awareness School, Remember Wilderness shares the tale of a relationship with wilderness that was once forgotten.
Over the course of 2016 and 2017 filmmaker, Michele Columbo shot this film The Light Within the Dolomites in Fassa and Gardena Valleys.聽
Filmmaker Jason van Bruggen and his team from DOT DOT DASH spent May in Greenland at Swiss Camp Polar Research station with Dr. Konrad Steffen from WSL exploring the Arctic science that foreshadows and explains the impacts of our changing climate.
Congress got closer to drilling in the "crown jewel" Arctic refuge with legislation that just cleared the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources
For a picturesque Tibetan village, an increase in tourists represents a complicated past and an uncertain future
This month's massive government climate report sounds the alarm about the rising risk of wildfire. Will the Trump Administration listen?
Damming rivers may seem like a clean and easy solution for Albania and other energy-hungry countries. But the devil is in the details.
A new report card ranks the Mountain West based on access, recreation, and responsible energy development
The decision to amend national monuments has roots in pro-energy, anti-conservation politics that has been simmering for 40 years
Zinke's strategic plan for the next four years shows no intention of addressing diversity, equity, and inclusion in our public lands
You may soon be able to change your DNA to optimize performance in your favorite sport
He was the alpha male of the first pack to live in Oregon since 1947. For years, a state biologist tracked him, collared him, counted his pups, weighed him, photographed him, and protected him. But then the animal known as OR4 broke one too many rules.
On Friday, the President told Senator Orrin Hatch that he planned to downsize two Utah national monuments. Here's why nothing's likely to happen soon.