Valley fever is an infection spread by a fungus that grows in the top few inches of soil in parts of the American West. It is transmitted when soil is disturbed and the fungal spores become airborne.
What one Arizona doctor’s quest to stop valley fever says about America’s preparedness for climate-driven disease.
National parks are melting, burning, and drying out. Rangers are being forced to take down signs explaining why.
E-bike sales are booming, providing a clean form of transportation that also improves public health. Yet cities remain ...
A project in Alaska is being fast-tracked in a process that has not yet included legally required consultations with Inupiaq ...
Almost a third of Americans live in unincorporated communities beyond city limits, where disaster aid can confuse and ...
La Cumplida has turned deforested hills into thriving shade-grown coffee farms, showing that healing the land can also grow ...
The Yurok Tribe has earned tens of millions from offsets, but critics say carbon markets perpetuate colonialism and allow companies to pay to pollute.
‘Wáahlaal Gíidaak, who is Indigenous Haida, Tlingit, and Ahtna Athabascan, grew up on Prince of Wales Island in Alaska that was home to about 6,000 people.
After a disaster, huge sums of money trickle down and change hands to fund debris cleanup, repairs, reconstruction, and more. Where all this money goes, and how projects are prioritized, is important ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results