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Home»Posts tagged with»rivers (Page 6)

Bristol Bay Organizations Challenge Environmental Protection Agency’s Removal of Bristol Bay Protections

By Bristol Bay Defense Alliance on Oct 8, 2019   Featured, Southwest Alaska, State  

Bristol Bay Organizations Challenge Environmental Protection Agency’s Removal of Bristol Bay Protections

ANCHORAGE, AK – Today, Bristol Bay organizations initiated a legal challenge against the Trump Administration’s effort to remove Clean Water Act science-based protections set in place to preserve the integrity of our salmon bearing streams. By removing those protections, the Administration not only broke the law, it made clear that local people will have no […]

Atmospheric Rivers Sometimes Soak Alaska

By Ned Rozell | Geophysical Institute on Aug 30, 2019   Featured, The Arctic and Alaska Science  

Atmospheric Rivers Sometimes Soak Alaska

Photo: An atmospheric river that transported immense amounts of water vapor from the tropics to Southcentral Alaska in November 2018. NOAA image Nome, August 2019: More than 2 inches of rainfall falls in one day, setting a new record. Thompson Pass, December 2017: 1.7 inches of snow piles up in 10 minutes. Seven feet of […]

Many Arctic Lakes Give Off Less Carbon Than Expected

By Michelle Ma | University of Washington on Feb 12, 2019   Featured, The Arctic and Alaska Science  

Many Arctic Lakes Give Off Less Carbon Than Expected

Northeast Alaska’s Yukon Flats region, seen with fall colors.David Butman/University of Washington The Arctic is warming twice as fast as the rest of the planet. One consequence of that trend is the thawing of permafrost, a layer of earth that has remained frozen for thousands of years in some areas. This frozen soil and vegetation […]

DDT in Alaska Meltwater Poses Cancer Risk for People Who Eat Lots of Fish

By Beth Staples | University of Maine on Dec 8, 2018   Featured, The Arctic and Alaska Science  

DDT in Alaska Meltwater Poses Cancer Risk for People Who Eat Lots of Fish

  [dropcap]C[/dropcap]hildren in Alaska whose diet includes a lot of fish from rivers fed by the Eastern Alaska Mountain Range may have a long-term elevated risk for cancer because of insecticides — including DDT — in the meltwater. Even with low levels of organochlorine pollutants (OCPs) in glacial meltwater, the risk of cancer for youth […]

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