Adventure
ArchiveOne of the worst massacres in mountaineering history happened this summer in Pakistan. Will it happen again?
Tourists forced off the beaches
Rep claims animal was playing
Alejo Muniz wins $100,000 in a wave-less finale, and eight spectators are arrested in a riot.
Dominates last day of competition
Four riders appeared on the list of 1998 positives
Returns home a hero
In California, Oregon, and Washington
Woman dies of heat exhaustion
Will soon swallow site of 'The Phantom Menace'
French Senate releases full list
How old are most Tour de France winners? At 34, could I even be a contender?
In talks to revive the women's event
Humpback was looking for sardines
Names released by Le Monde
Conservationists concerned about the ecosystem
Thousands planted by legalization activists
SeaWorld has called the new documentary Blackfish, about its treatment of orcas in captivity, “shamefully dishonest, deliberately misleading, and scientifically inaccurate.” But the co-writer argues that the facts speak for themselves.
French Senate plans to release 1998 dopers' names
Denies doping Jamaican Sprinters
We go shoulder to shoulder in Los Angeles’s Marathon Crash Race, a 4,000-strong underground scrum
Environmentalists angry over video
Obviously illegal, probably impossible
The Chokecherry/Sierra Madre wind farm promises to spin up enough electrons to power a million homes, but the project is also a poster child for the fears and anxieties renewable energy can bring to rural America— and to anglers.
Attempting to remove doping suspicions
Australian surfer David Scard, 37, runs Kirra-based World Surfaris’ Stealth Travel Club, which whisks surfers to the biggest waves at a moment’s notice. His success rate: 100 percent.
Challenges take on captive orcas
New program rolling out in Dubai
Why is Europe dominating the United States in meteorological prognostication? Follow the money.
After Sandy, attention turned to fortifying New York City. But another location on the eastern seaboard faces a more immediate threat.
Pearls of the Sky honor fallen leader
Leads to higher levels of the "hunger hormone"
Right whale was caught in a fishing line
Bull gores woman in the chest
New analysis of pre-eruption cycle
Collapses near French coast
The options can be daunting, so we've narrowed it down to five trips you shouldn't miss.
The battle over a major mining project in Wisconsin's Penokee Hills used to be based on environmental impacts, recreation access, and jobs. Now it's about heavily-armed militia groups brought in to protect mine workers from "eco-terrorist types."
A bill to declare lunar national park would have the United States lay claim to the moon—or at least, the stuff we left up there.
A terrific new documentary about injured snowboarder Kevin Pearce takes a searing look at the dark side of action sports
Forget about Lance Armstrong. These ten scandals rocked cycling to its core.
Wins the $250,000 Sikorsky Prize
Was practicing for Great Falls Race
Boat capsized off Maryland coast
Offered by 1 in 3 Fortune 500 companies
Park asks people to stop frying eggs on the ground
Causes under investigation
Time trial solidifies Tour pecking order
Daring escape through the window
Four men are attempting to row a small fiberglass boat through a notorious Arctic route that has claimed the lives of countless explorers. Why? Because it's now possible, thanks to climate change.
In the wake of Chris Froome's brilliant stage victory, the critics have turned on the rider. To silence the doubters, Team Sky needs to address its problem with transparency.
In the wake of Chris Froome's brilliant stage victory, we turn to one of the foremost doping experts to see what his performance signals in the peloton.
For more than a century, Western climbers have hired Nepal’s Sherpas to do the most dangerous work on Mount Everest. It’s a lucrative way of life in a poor region, but no service industry in the world so frequently kills and maims its workers for the benefit of paying clients. The dead are often forgotten, and their families left with nothing but ghosts.