Gov. Mike Dunleavy declared a state disaster on Monday after spring breakup caused damage or displaced residents in ...
See more of our trusted coverage when you search. Prefer Newsweek on Google to see more of our trusted coverage when you search. Alaska's rivers are turning bright orange, and scientists are working ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Rivers and streams in Alaska are changing color – from a clean, clear blue to a rusty orange – because of the toxic metals ...
Researchers for years have been baffled as rivers and streams across Alaska turned orange, but new research points to climate change as an answer. Scientists suspect the drastic color change is the ...
Ice jams that blocked two Alaska rivers broke loose over the weekend, unleashing a surge of ice and water that caused major floods, damaged homes and left behind huge chunks of ice as tall as 12 feet.
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Warming rivers in Alaska threaten Chinook salmon populations and Indigenous food security
For millennia, Indigenous people living in Alaska and Canada's Yukon territory have relied on Chinook salmon. The large, fatty fish provide essential nutrients for Arctic living and have influenced ...
The route is up the Taku River, south of Juneau, to where it meets the Tulsequah River, just over the U.S.-Canada border.
Canagold Resources, the company proposing to open the New Polaris gold mine on the Tulsequah River in British Columbia, says ...
Rivers and streams in Alaska are changing color – from a clean, clear blue to a rusty orange – because of the toxic metals released by thawing permafrost, according to a new study. The finding ...
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