Environment
ArchiveFor aerial athletes, it's not unusual to come across birds while in flight, like the threatened bearded vulture
Through Quiet Parks International, Gordon Hempton hopes to save the earth’s few truly natural soundscapes
New research shows just how much global warming is eating away at the glaciers on the world’s highest peaks
'Protecting the Crossroads' tells the story of how palm trees have turned from a cash crop into invasive plant in Mexico
Fly-fishing guides are out to prove that the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act is fraught with public misconceptions
'When Rivers Rise' shows how India and Google are partnering to provide better intelligence to inform flood warnings and evacuations
A new report found that towns near plenty of outdoor recreation attract new residents and higher incomes. But this could also mean higher costs of living, affordable housing challenges, and encroachment into vulnerable landscapes.
OnX Offroad opens up 985 million acres of public land with off-grid navigation
How to take full advantage of your 640 million acres
Photographer Christian Vizl documents the ocean’s beauty to show us what we’re ravaging
After an especially brutal winter in Colorado, Independence Pass needs a team of seven heavy-equipment operators, an avalanche forecaster, and a surveillance crew to make the road passable
What do we lose when we lose the animals that make up the soundtrack of the outdoors?
But the federal agency responsible for managing more than 245 million acres of public land kept the boilerplate about the economic value of these places
Tips on how to get one of the most enviable jobs in the outdoor industry
Amid stories of ecological doom, we found a few instances of progress worth celebrating
'Phenomenal Noumenal Wonderful' is a four-year project designed to highlight the beautiful landscapes of the Pacific Northwest
A bill introduced to Congress on May 1 could make outdoor recreation an official treatment option for veterans suffering from mental-health disorders. It's a huge opportunity for vets—and our public lands.
Summer is the ideal time for stargazing. Here are five tips for seeing nature's light show.
After a massive fire, one man tried to replant the forests of his childhood. After more than half a decade, he realized he was fighting a losing battle against climate change. We all are.
An official investigation into ethics violations by Trump's new Secretary of the Interior was opened just four days after his confirmation
The Gila is America’s most endangered river. What do we stand to lose if it disappears thanks to climate change and overuse?
No one has done more to sound the alarm about climate change than Bill McKibben. We asked him: is there any hope at all?
The Democratic candidate released her comprehensive plan for saving our national parks and public lands. It's impressive, even if it never comes to fruition.
Josh Morgerman is an obsessive stormchaser. As hurricanes grow fiercer and more destructive, what does it mean to be someone who loves them?
You don't need to destroy something to experience it
His new book, 'Horizon,' is the crowning achievement of a writer whose eyes never stray from the long view
In its ongoing series with the U.S. Forest Service, More Than Just Parks is profiling iconic landscapes from America’s national forests
Grand Canyon National Park superintendent Christine Lehnertz notified park employees on March 14 that she was resigning, effective March 31. This comes weeks after a four-month investigation turned up no wrongdoing and found a series of 2018 allegations against her to be "unfounded."
All signs point to active weather continuing into the warmer months, which will bring a litany of new hazards
She was a survivor and an alpha. And then she was legally shot and killed by a hunter. Yellowstone Park's legendary wolf researcher Rick McIntyre reflects on the life of one of the park's most famous canines.
The crucial public lands legislation was just signed by President Trump. Here's why you should care.
The Trump Administration plans to delist the gray wolf across the Lower 48. Here’s why that's happening and what it means for the future of the species.
Luis Benitez became the face of government’s interest in the outdoor recreation industry, one that’s larger than both the auto and oil and gas exploration industries. He sat down with 'Outside' to discuss the industry’s expanding role in politics and his own future.
Going zero waste is hard, but these easy changes to how you eat, drink, and store food will make a big difference
The public comment period that will impact a redefinition of what's protected under the Clean Water Act is open through April 15
In 2017, the Trump administration announced that it was shrinking the iconic Utah national monument by nearly 50 percent. Leath Tonino devised a sketchy 200-mile solo desert trek, following the path of the legendary cartographer who literally put these contentious canyons on the map.
Supporters say the proposed regulations are over 40 years overdue and would be a major win for public health
A compromise over Utah public land reveals how one of the biggest conservation acts in years got through the Senate this week
The lengths to which the Utah Congressman will go to avoid addressing the real issues are getting laughably extraordinary
Our favorite places to live could look a lot different in 2080, according to a new study
The former oil and gas lobbyist is the worst-case scenario for public lands
Think of the weather as your mood and the climate as your personality: your mood changes each day, whereas your personality is the sum of all those moods over the course of years
The little orca known as Scarlet is dead. Will her death be a turning point for the Northwest's endangered Southern Resident killer whales? Washington State governor Jay Inslee is proposing strong action.
Park rangers, wildland firefighters, and an EPA lawyer have all told me that they're worried they'll lose their jobs if they talk publicly about the shutdown
Photographer Ian Tuttle visited Death Valley last week and asked tourists and locals about how they see the desert park faring a month into the government shutdown
Yet it—along with its meteorologists—is struggling through the shutdown
It's anything but an unpaid vacation, especially when your job is protecting the environment
In Red Desert, Wyoming, wildlife-biology student Anna Ortega is studying mule deer after their 150-mile migration
Hundreds of people from the Everglades to Yosemite have mobilized as part of a grassroots effort to rid national parks of refuse while federal employees remain furloughed
Plus, a new protocol will make it more difficult for other parks to close during the shutdown
The shutdown is hampering fire prevention efforts in the state, even while the President looks to disaster-relief funds for his wall
The initiative, led by Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, is ambitious, but some in the outdoor industry argue it's the only hope for saving wild places from climate change
Just days before Secretary Zinke left his post, the agency quietly proposed rules that would have it ignoring many Freedom of Information Act requests
And why you might just prefer a good old-fashioned website
A man fell from Yosemite's Nevada Fall on Christmas Day
A longtime local's perspective on the mayhem
Our northernmost state is also the most vulnerable to climate change
That "organic litter" you just threw? It'll still be around in a year.
New emails reveal how the U.S. Forest Service caved to Dominion Energy in its quest to build a disruptive pipeline along the Appalachian Trail
Over 16,000 employees will go without pay and local communities will lose approximately $18 million per day
Why was the ocean so nasty along the West Coast on Sunday and Monday? It’s all thanks to a low-pressure system thousands of miles away and a meteorological phenomenon called a fetch. Let me explain.
After weeks of speculation, President Trump announces the end of Zinke's time as Secretary of the Department of the Interior
I've watched Zinke’s downward spiral with trepidation. Yet his departure does not imply a pro-environment reorientation at Interior, and I doubt we've seen the last of him.
Advocates of drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge are trying to make an end run around the law and the American people. If they succeed, your backyard conservation area could be next.
Inside the most destructive fire in American history—and why the West's cities and towns will keep on burning
When Dick's Sporting Goods announced that it would reduce gun sales in the wake of the Parkland school shooting, CEO Edward Stack said he wanted to start a conversation about gun safety in America. What he got instead was a firestorm.
The movers and shakers inspiring positive change in the outdoors
Is something sinister going on?
A 7.0 quake struck Anchorage, causing serious damage
The Alaska senator sent us a letter about her enviro bonafides. Naturally, we checked her work.
Putting the deadliest fire in California history into perspective
Attorney Xochitl Torres Small just won a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives in a rural district. One of her prominent talking points? Protecting the region's national monument.
Over 150,000 Californians were evacuated last night and 20 million more are under red-flag fire warnings
The results from Tuesday's elections prove that the majority of people in this country revere our public lands. Politicians, listen up.
"What I've been searching for, I now see, is something bigger than acceptance, bigger than smokejumping, bigger than proving I can be one of the guys."
The ridges and reefs of West Papua are some of the most biodiverse on the planet. Two acclaimed filmmakers are on a mission to make sure they stay that way.
If she wins tomorrow, the 38-year-old Democrat would become the country's first Native American governor. Can a moderate still win in Trump's America? Idaho is about to find out.
Unsurprisingly, the dates are getting later and later, according to the records we have
Carbon offsets are an easy way to mitigate the impact of your travel, but they're not the only way—and you don't necessarily have to shell out money to make a difference
Is the movement that sparked the 2016 takeover of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge ready to age out?