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For his book “Into the Thaw,” Jon Waterman and a photographer traveled over 500 miles by foot and pack raft, visiting various communities along the Noatak River.
“Ice to Water” By M Jackson; Torrey House Press, 2024; 296 pages; $18.95. M Jackson, a geographer and glaciologist who lives in Oregon, has written two previous nonfiction books, including ...
Governments and U.S. states committed to climate action now need to persuade the oil industry to protect the world from ...
Climate change plays a significant role in Murkowski’s memoir. The prologue recalls a trip she took from Capitol Hill to ...
As the impacts of climate change intensify, Indigenous communities across Alaska and Louisiana are facing difficult questions ...
published in March 2025 by the Alaska Fire Science Consortium. The state is on the frontlines of climate change, with dramatic changes “real and visible," according to The Nature Conservancy chapter ...
The first female Orthodox saint in North America was an Indigenous woman who spent her entire life with her Yup'ik family and ...
Websites can be scrubbed of climate change references and the U.S. halted from international and national climate assessments, but rising temperatures leave their own evidence, especially in the ...
Ben Weissenbach's new book offers a thoughtful look at Alaska's enduring magic—and its rapidly changing climate.
Travel the Tatshenshini River in Alaska and visit Tatshenshini-Alsek Provincial Park and Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve before glaciers disappear.
The Arctic is one of the areas most visibly impacted by human-caused climate change, with some areas becoming almost unrecognizable in recent years. Former Denali park ranger Jon Waterman has been ...