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Kick off winter with Warren Miller!

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Environment

Environment

Archive

Improvisational tunes set to the sounds of insects

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In one fell swoop, President Biden is undoing his predecessor's most harmful work on public lands, climate change, clean air and water, and environmental justice

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The end of the Trump administration can't come soon enough for our climate and public lands. Thankfully, there are a series of actions our new president can immediately take to begin undoing the damage.

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Drawing only three bidders and $14 million, the administration's attempt to drill for oil in the massive Alaskan refuge is likely dead on arrival

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One of the great environmental writers of our time, he explored how we live justly with each other and with the earth

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Season Equipment is trying to break the cycle of new gear every year

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It showed up, attracted a flood of selfie seekers, and disappeared four days later. But now, after death threats and a federal investigation, it's with BLM officials trying to figure out where it came from in the first place.

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The 35th generation New Mexican will oversee public lands, national parks, Native American affairs, and more

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In the spell of a week, a mysterious monolith appeared in the Utah desert and was subsequently removed by some slackline bros. The saga has raised more questions than answers.

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Across the West, fire season lasts longer and has become more intense than any time in history—tens of thousands of structures burn every year, and dozens of people die. But new research is highlighting a different problem: those who survive are never the same.

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In its final months, Trump's Department of the Interior shows its true colors by rushing through drilling leases in Alaska and rewriting major components of the bipartisan Great American Outdoors Act

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With a key list of Land and Water Conservation Fund projects missing, political subterfuge threatens the bipartisan legislative achievement

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Today’s battles over climate change and fracking share a common origin: the timber wars of the Pacific Northwest

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Grant Horton and Michael Stevens take on a seemingly pleasant journey around Washington D.C. only to be hit with many environmental hurdles.

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The marine biologist has become a leading voice in the movement by deftly communicating what few people understand: that cleaning up the planet requires a commitment to social justice

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Taking care of our planet shouldn't be a partisan issue. These activist-athletes think the flag might help bridge the divide.

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A lesson for the Department of the Interior staff: you can’t delete official tweets

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“America’s Amazon” is being sold to China, at a huge cost to the environment, and a net loss to taxpayers

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Jeremy Jones, the king of freeriding, wants to unleash the political might of the 50 million Americans who love our natural playgrounds

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It was a roller coaster of a summer for Alaska's most controversial extraction project. In July, it looked all but certain that the salmon-threatening proposal would get its first federal permit. But then things took a surprising turn.

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Even in traditionally conservative states like Montana and Wyoming, no single issue unites centrist voters in 2020 more than public-lands protection. That's one reason Montana Republican senator Steve Daines has spent the past 18 months trying to convince voters he's a reliable conservationist. Critics say it's mere "greenwashing," but his success may decide the balance of power in Washington.

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A guide to key ballot measures and Senate and House races that will have huge impacts on the way we address climate change

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As the mountains thaw, rocks are coming loose from the ice, increasing the risk of injury or death for even the most experienced mountaineers

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The villainous BLM boss appears to have survived a court ouster, further threatening Trump's oil agenda

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These maps are packed with information about current conditions. All you need to know is how to interpret them.

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Chris Watson, the legendary field recordist for David Attenborough’s films, says this is a unique opportunity to discover the art and pleasure of hearing our world

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An urban food writer chases deer in the backcountry with two of Instagram’s female hunting stars—and comes home transformed

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In a new era of menacing blazes, there are lessons to be learned from the people who stay and defend their properties

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This six-part series explores the history of California's forests and the increasing threat of wildfires across the state

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A federal court just ruled that the BLM's leader was serving illegally, with plans to reconvene next week to consider if all of his actions were illegal, too

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A professional snowboarder's quest to find a united path forward on climate policy through a shared love of the outdoors

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This six-part series explores the history of California's forests, as well as the increasing threat of wildfires across the state

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This fire season is yet another sign that we can't wait any longer to fix our planet

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'Common Ground,' narrated by photographer Jimmy Chin, reminds us that turning a passion for the outdoors into action requires a plan

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Sponsor Content: Bank of the West

Bank of the West’s new 1% for the Planet checking account puts your money to work for the environment

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Riding out the boom-and-bust tourism economy

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The Ohio waterway that so famously caught on fire in 1969, inspiring the Clean Water Act, caught fire again this week

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In her new book, 'Superman's Not Coming,' the activist gives a lesson in community engagement and warns that we shouldn't expect the government to save us

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Sponsor Content: TEVA and COTOPAXI

Check out the all-new Teva and Cotopaxi collaboration

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Marine biologist Wallace J. Nichols's house burned to the ground in California's CZU Lightning Complex fire. He wrote his daughter a letter breaking the news.

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The marine biologist wants us all to start asking a new question: What does the future look like if we get it right?

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We can see right through your hunting selfies

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The good news: you can easily opt for a greener bank so your money works for good

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Three court decisions are a sign of the power of protest

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William Perry Pendley is finally up for Senate confirmation. Here's a reminder of why he is not up to the job.

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Between a global pandemic, protests against police brutality, and unprecedented environmental rollbacks, a lifelong asthmatic reflects on how 2020 is the year we must come to terms with the tenuous nature of this simple act—and why ensuring our fragile future begins with protecting our air

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During a week of historic decisions, the Supreme Court decided that an energy company can drill under the Appalachian Trail

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Understanding the interface between humankind and wildlife is essential to averting infectious-disease outbreaks. We can't afford to ignore it anymore.

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The Senate passed the Great American Outdoors Act, 73 to 25, allocating billions to recreation

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According to a new analysis by the Center for American Progress, his administration has removed or is attempting to remove protections from areas of public land equivalent to the size of Florida

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The Navajo Nation has the highest known rate of coronavirus in the country. The scale of the tragedy can be traced to a long history of denying the tribe's legal right to water access.

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The pandemic has shut down the most polluting industries around the world and turned us all into more adaptable consumers. That still isn't enough.

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'Rising from the Ashes' follows the scientists studying the summer steelhead resurgence in Washington's Elwha River

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The problem is a global one, but individual actions still matter

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'Dear Humanity' is a celebration of the earth's beauty and a call to action to protect it

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Invasive pythons wreak havoc on Florida ecosystems, and each year the state Fish and Wildlife officials hold a competition for amateur and professional hunters to see who can round up the most reptiles

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Dennis Sizemore has been thrown by a grizzly bear and traded gunfire with poachers, but that hasn't stopped him from doing conservation work around the globe

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Why are two outdoor industry giants lending their support to a lawsuit aimed at stopping the Trump Administration's assault on clean air standards? It's good business.

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Emigrant Gulch, just north of Yellowstone National Park in Montana's Paradise Valley, is the proposed site of a new gold mine

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If you're planning on having a fire, you need to know how to put it out correctly

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Planning a camping trip once this whole pandemic thing is over? You'll want to have a campfire.

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In this film from director Brian Kelley, Carl Casey explains what a champion tree is and some strategies he uses to find them

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The massive global demonstrations planned for its 50th anniversary were canceled. Luckily, there's still plenty that environmentalists can do from home.

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Super tuskers are a highly poached population of elephants that are known to have ivory tusks that drop to the ground.

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This year's most at-risk rivers, the Lower Missouri and Upper Mississippi, provide water for millions of people in the Midwest

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Lessons from Wendell Berry, Wallace Stegner, and my neighborhood trees

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The coronavirus package is a missed opportunity to take meaningful action on carbon emissions, putting us decades behind on climate action

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The economic catastrophe resulting from COVID-19 will have surprising and lasting impacts—good and bad—on endangered wildlife

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Is it tone-deaf to talk about climate right now? Or is this an opportunity to tackle major global problems in tandem?

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Social distancing is a prime opportunity to discover the nature in our own backyards and redefine our idea of what's wild

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With the public distracted, Secretary Bernhardt is advancing environmental harm

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We were already worried enough about the climate. So with COVID-19, how do we cope with a brand-new feeling of helplessness?

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Experimental programs in Georgia and Louisiana are placing patients who may be infected in park cabins and RVs

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When the mine closed in Questa, New Mexico, in 2014, the town found itself in the midst of an identity crisis

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As more states hold—or decide to postpone—presidential primaries, a new poll of Mountain West voters shows that a clear majority support climate action, clean air and water, and public lands protection

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The nonprofit WildEarth Guardians is taking on the U.S. Forest Service's grazing regulations

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Sponsor Content

Cristina Mittermeier has inspired millions of people and has sparked conversations on complex issues with her breathtaking images

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