Tribes from the Bering Sea isle say they’re living — and dying— with the toxic legacy of Cold War military installations. A U.N. special rapporteur is considering their case.
Why did the woolly mammoth cross the road? Or more specifically, why did the woolly mammoth cross the road, but not the woolly rhino? A new study could explain why some ancient animals, like ...
Ten thousand years ago, retreating glaciers scraped sediment from the landscape near what is now Kingston, Ontario, leaving behind a granite chain of more than a thousand mountains. Today, these ...
Sandra Gologergen from Savoonga has lost many members of her immediate family to cancer. She believes military contamination on St. Lawrence Island is a cause. The tribal governments of Alaska's ...