News

In early July, flash floods along the Guadalupe River killed 138 people and caused an estimated $1.1 billion in damage, ...
At low tide on Tybee Island, Georgia, the beach stretches out as wide as it gets with the small waves breaking far away ...
The U.S. discards vast quantities of critical minerals in mine waste each year - including enough lithium to power 10 million ...
The Department of the Interior, or DOI, has such a wide-ranging set of duties that it’s sometimes referred to in Washington, ...
They brought in their big heavy equipment and started coming up Little River to remove debris,” Huggins said. The workers, ...
The rare window to ask tough questions opens after a disaster. Too often, it closes before accurate answers can emerge.
Desperate for jobs, three communities embraced a bold electric vehicle promise. Now, they’re left with questions—and no jobs.
As the U.N. body faces an American threat to its jurisdiction over deep-sea mining, diplomats have more or less left all the ...
The United States is drifting ever further away from science and climate reality. So why does life seem so normal?
Faced with a looming fuel crunch, some worry California will push aside its efforts to combat climate change to keep gasoline flowing.
New maps show that where animal feeding operations exist, higher percentages of Latino and uninsured residents also live.