A new report by dozens of international scientists says the state is the largest contributor to global glacier loss.
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Climate change is shrinking glaciers faster than ever, with 7 trillion tons lost since 2000Climate change is accelerating the melting of the world's mountain ... Survey of Denmark and Greenland and one of about 60 authors of the study. Glaciers in Alaska are melting at the fastest rate of any of the 19 regions studied, losing about 67 billion ...
Robin Bronen has spent decades working to protect immigrants and Alaska Native communities with the Alaska Institute for Justice.
Phys.org on MSN9d
Alaska's lakes and ponds reveal effects of permafrost thawAs climate change warms the Arctic, permafrost is thawing ... To examine how the relationship between lake area and the extent of intact permafrost varies across Alaska, the researchers used images taken nearly daily at 10-meter resolution by the Sentinel ...
The Associated Press on MSN9d
Trump puts the spotlight anew on a major Alaska gas project. Will it make a difference?From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground ... President Donald Trump has repeatedly expressed support for a major natural gas pipeline in Alaska — comments that have drawn fresh attention to a project ...
The cuts came just before a separate wave of departures was expected under the Trump administration’s so-called deferred resignation program.
The Bering Sea trawl sector, valued at about $2 billion, catches more chum salmon as bycatch than subsistence fishermen harvest.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration scientists and other employees in Seattle are among the estimated 880 agency staff fired Thursday across the U.S., according to Sen. Maria Cantwell’s office and union representatives.
Climate change is accelerating the melting of the world’s mountain glaciers, according to a massive new study that found them shrinking more than twice as fast as in the early 2000s.
In the Northwest Atlantic, Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico, invasive lionfish, native to Asia and Australia, have spread, preying on native fish essential to coral reefs. Lionfish have become one of the world’s most damaging marine fish invasions.
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