• Search in Site

Search in Site

Alaska Native News

  • HOME
  • Featured
  • General
  • World
  • National
  • State
  • Rural
  • Arctic
  • Science/Education
  • Health
  • At Sea
  • Politics
  • Weather
  • Tides
  • Entertainment
    • Daily Crossword/Sudoku
    • Comics
  • Opinions/Op/Ed/Letters
    • Op/Ed and the Editor
    • Submit Press Release, OP/ED or Letter to the Editor
  • Advertising
  • Contact Us
  • North Slope/Northwest Alaska
  • Interior Alaska
  • Southwest Alaska
  • Southcentral
  • Southeast Alaska
  • This Day in Alaskan and U.S. History
  1. Home
  2. /
  3. warming
  4. /
  5. Page 17
Home»Posts tagged with»warming (Page 17)

Trump to Roll Back Obama-era Environmental Rules

By Peter Heinlein | VOA on Mar 28, 2017   Featured, National, Politics  

Trump to Roll Back Obama-era Environmental Rules

WHITE HOUSE — White House officials say President Donald Trump will sign executive orders Tuesday that would effectively dismantle Obama-era environmental regulations, rekindling the highly charged partisan debate about how human activity affects the earth’s climate, and deepening concern decades of work on global climate treaties may be unraveling. “Many agree that would be disastrous,” Dutch […]

Why We’re Protecting the Arctic

By Paul Nicklen on Dec 21, 2016   Op/Ed and the Editor  

Why We’re Protecting the Arctic

For the last 40 years, I’ve roamed the polar regions of our world. I started as a child, growing up in an Inuit community on Baffin Island, Canada, where I learned from the Inuit people not just to survive in our environment — but to thrive in and love the Arctic for all it had […]

Tales of frozen water, from San Francisco

By Ned Rozell | Geophysical Institute on Dec 21, 2016   Featured, Science/Education, The Arctic and Alaska Science  

Tales of frozen water, from San Francisco

SAN FRANCISCO — On rare winter mornings here, a skim of ice forms on sidewalk puddles. But water’s solid form is mostly an abstraction in this land of blooming flowers and the hummingbirds that visit them. Except for the week of the fall meeting of the American Geophysical Union. Dozens of the 22,000 scientists gathering […]

Much of the Arctic is Lower than it was Before

By Ned Rozell | Geophysical Institute on May 13, 2016   Featured, The Arctic and Alaska Science  

Much of the Arctic is Lower than it was Before

When botanist Janet Jorgenson first visited a patch of tundra east of Kaktovik in 1988, it was flat, dry and thick with 29 species of lichens and mosses. Now, Tapkaurak is wet, gullied and fragrant with sedges and grasses. And, like other parts of Alaska’s North Slope, it is a few feet farther from the […]

« Previous 1 … 15 16 17 18 19 20 Next »
  • Advertise with Us
  • Submit Press Release, OP/ED or Letter to the Editor
  • Contact Alaska Native News
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
© 2026, ↑ Alaska Native News