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Environment

Archive

Photographer Ian Tuttle visited Death Valley last week and asked tourists and locals about how they see the desert park faring a month into the government shutdown

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Yet it鈥攁long with its meteorologists鈥攊s struggling through the shutdown

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It's anything but an unpaid vacation, especially when your job is protecting the environment

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In Red Desert, Wyoming, wildlife-biology student Anna Ortega鈥嬧嬧嬧嬧嬧嬧 is studying mule deer after their 150-mile migration

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Hundreds of people from the Everglades to Yosemite have mobilized as part of a grassroots effort to rid national parks of refuse while federal employees remain furloughed

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Plus, a new protocol will make it more difficult for other parks to close during the shutdown

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The shutdown is hampering fire prevention efforts in the state, even while the President looks to disaster-relief funds for his wall

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The initiative, led by Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, is ambitious, but some in the outdoor industry argue it's the only hope for saving wild places from climate change

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Just days before Secretary Zinke left his post, the agency quietly proposed rules that would have it ignoring many Freedom of Information Act requests

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And why you might just prefer a good old-fashioned website

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A man fell from Yosemite's Nevada Fall on Christmas Day

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A longtime local's perspective on the mayhem

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Our northernmost state is also the most vulnerable to climate change

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That "organic litter" you just threw? It'll still be around in a year.

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New emails reveal how the U.S. Forest Service caved to Dominion Energy in its quest to build a disruptive pipeline along the Appalachian Trail

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Over 16,000 employees will go without pay and local communities will lose approximately $18 million per day

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Why was the ocean so nasty along the West Coast on Sunday and Monday? It鈥檚 all thanks to a low-pressure system thousands of miles away and a meteorological phenomenon called a fetch. Let me explain.

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After weeks of speculation, President Trump announces the end of Zinke's time as Secretary of the Department of the Interior

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I've watched Zinke鈥檚 downward spiral with trepidation. Yet his departure does not imply a pro-environment reorientation at Interior, and I doubt we've seen the last of him.聽

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Advocates of drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge are trying to make an end run around the law and the American people. If they succeed, your backyard conservation area could be next.

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Inside the most destructive fire in American history鈥攁nd why the West's cities and towns will keep on burning

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When Dick's Sporting Goods announced that it would reduce gun sales in the wake of the Parkland school shooting, CEO Edward Stack said he wanted to start a conversation about gun safety in America. What he got instead was a firestorm.

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The movers and shakers inspiring positive change in the outdoors

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A 7.0 quake struck Anchorage, causing serious damage

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The Alaska senator sent us a letter about her enviro bonafides. Naturally, we checked her work.

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Putting the deadliest fire in California history into perspective

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Attorney Xochitl Torres Small just won a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives in a rural district. One of her prominent talking points? Protecting the region's national monument.

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Over 150,000 Californians were evacuated last night and 20 million more are under red-flag fire warnings

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"What I've been searching for, I now see, is something bigger than acceptance, bigger than smokejumping, bigger than proving I can be one of the guys."

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The results from Tuesday's elections prove that the majority of people in this country revere our public lands. Politicians, listen up.

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If she wins tomorrow, the 38-year-old Democrat would become the country's first Native American governor. Can a moderate still win in Trump's America? Idaho is about to find out.

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Unsurprisingly, the dates are getting later and later, according to the records we have

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The ridges and reefs of West Papua are some of the most biodiverse on the planet. Two acclaimed filmmakers are on a mission to make sure they stay that way.

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Carbon offsets are an easy way to mitigate the impact of your travel, but they're not the only way鈥攁nd you don't necessarily have to shell out money to make a difference

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Is the movement that sparked the 2016 takeover of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge ready to age out?

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It's uncommon for animals to get drunk, but some creatures are attracted to alcohol

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One of the worst tragedies in the history of firefighting prompted little change to a culture that regularly puts young lives at risk. A few seasoned veterans are working to fix that.

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Can recent events be chalked up to the occasional confusion of bureaucracy? Or is something more worrisome afoot?

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From Your Forests Your Future聽and the Pattiz Brothers, this video demonstrates what goes into a wilderness designation.聽

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What the admittedly confusing categorization actually means

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Now that the House Natural Resources Committee has fallen under Democrat control, it could mean real oversight for the Department of Interior, says Arizona Representative Raul Grijalva

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Even as Secretary of the Interior Ryan Zinke has said he wants to give states more decision-making power over federal lands, the Trump administration has taken numerous steps to limit public input

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This video features outdoor writer Hal Herring聽a native Alabaman who鈥檚 made his living and his home on the public lands of the west.

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In what might be a first for any American company, the clothing brand has endorsed two Senate candidates

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One photographer's attempt to find art in fire, even as climate change makes conditions more deadly

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And replaced her with a loyalist political operative who may not need Senate confirmation

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The 33 special agents assigned to the Investigative Services Branch handle the most complex crimes committed on NPS land. When a day hike in Rocky Mountain National Park ended in a grisly death, ISB veteran Beth Shott hit the trail, where she began unraveling a harrowing case.

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It鈥檚 no secret that coral reefs are in trouble, however, scientists are using modern techniques to revitalize the reproduction聽of reefs.

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A few years ago, more than 60 percent of the country fell under some level of drought. The worst thing? These warm, dry conditions tend to lead to even warmer, drier ones.

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We sent a writer to check out the alleged uptick in damage to Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument post President Trump's decision to shrink it

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Five bills approved by the House Committee on Natural Resources during a chaotic news cycle could weaken the historically popular environmental law

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They don't vote. Why are the people most concerned about climate change some of the least likely to show up in November?

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A small Arctic community is at risk of getting submerged by the sea. The biggest problem? It's too expensive to move away.

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A former champion and constant runner-up face off on the final day of Fat Bear Week 2018, but every one is a winner in our hearts

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There really is a massive difference between weather alerts depending on where they're issued.聽The question is: Can you handle the heat?

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It's up to Republicans to bring it back to life and make it better than ever

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Decades ago, Deanna Curtis was captivated by a birds of prey demonstration. Today, she's one of a growing number of women involved in the ancient sport of falconry.

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For one week every fall, Alaska's Katmai National Park celebrates the survival skills and ample rolls of the happiest bears in the world. But there's more to their reigning champion than meets the eye.

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The U.S. Coast Guard closes the Potomac River any time President Trump wants to hit the links.

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This week's ruling to stop a trophy hunt was a big win for conservation groups and may impact grizzlies across the country

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Boyan Slat, the 24-year-old founder and CEO of the Ocean Cleanup, has finally launched a system he says will rid the Great Pacific Garbage Patch of half its plastic trash in five years.

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Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke will offer up nearly 4 million acres of public lands for lease this year, much of it for dirt cheap

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The conservative Utah Congressman wants to fully fund our national parks and our public lands. Huh?

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Irreparable Harm, from Wild Confluence鈥嬧嬧嬧 films, investigates the impact of a local mine on a community's natural food sources.

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Republicans from Ulysses S. Grant to George H.W. Bush have passed some of our most powerful environmental laws. Why did the party reverse course?

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Is it even possible to reduce the number of massive blazes that are now commonplace in the American West?

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Nominee Raymond David Vela seems to care about making our national parks more accessible

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How do you protect yourself from wildfire on a warming planet? You burn everything on purpose.

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鈥嬧嬧嬧嬧嬧嬧嬧楾he Night Zeus Was Angry鈥 is a timelapse film that features a lightning聽storm over the Baltic聽Sea.

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Pioneers, the government, even John Muir helped kick out Native Americans from their homes on national parks. But in Yosemite, the Miwuk Tribe is getting its village back.

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Last week, the Bureau of Land Management released plans聽that would have opened up thousands of acres of former national monuments to mining and drilling鈥攄espite Zinke's promises to the contrary

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Seeds of Change profiles聽Dr. Cliff Kapono whose work is defining the future of stewardship in Hawaii.

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Yosemite National Park closed for three weeks because of the blaze. Here's how much revenue the region lost because of that.

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鈥120 Seconds to Change the World鈥 features Director of the Okapi Conservation Project, Rosmarie Ruf.聽

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Despite promises from the president and Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke, the BLM wants to open up hundreds of thousands of acres in Grand Staircase-Escalante and Bears Ears national monuments for companies to drill and mine

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As Wyoming prepares for the first grizzly hunt in the lower 48 in decades, at least two protesters won tags they say they won't use. Will their strategy work?

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Golf courses! Water parks! Man-made lakes! If Utah has its way, the retiree oasis of St. George will explode with growth, turning red rock to bluegrass and slaking its thirst with a new billion-dollar pipeline from the Colorado River.

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At 475 square miles, the Mendocino Complex Fire is the size of Phoenix

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