Public Lands Preserve More Than What's on the Surface Inside a paleontology quest through Grand Staircase–Escalante and Deep Time By Riley Black June 21, 2021 In this story: public lands
Can We Save the San Joaquin's Salmon? The upstream effort to restore a river and its fish By Jeremy Miller June 16, 2021 In this story: water, fish, climate change
The Bison and the Blackfeet Indigenous nations are spearheading a movement to restore buffalo to the American landscape By Michelle Nijhuis June 14, 2021 In this story: public lands, bison
John Muir in Native America Muir's romantic vision obscured Indigenous ownership of the land—but a new generation is pulling away the veil By Rebecca Solnit March 2, 2021 In this story: John Muir
Trash From All Over the Country Winds Up in Uniontown A hub of civil rights organizing takes on environmental justice By Wei Tchou February 26, 2021 In this story: environmental justice
The Demise and Potential Revival of the American Chestnut Before a disastrous blight, the American chestnut was a keystone species in eastern forests. Could genetic engineering help bring it back? By Kate Morgan February 25, 2021 In this story: forests
Can Harvesting Rare Earth Elements Solve the Coal Ash Crisis? Over 3 billion tons of coal ash occupy more than 1,400 sites across the US By Austyn Gaffney February 23, 2021 In this story: coal ash, coal
The Best Rx for Environmental Health Disparities The path to a healthier future: address environmental health risks today By Harriet A. Washington December 22, 2020 In this story: bright futures, coronavirus
Dorceta E. Taylor on Environmental Justice The future of environmental justice is true equality By Dorceta E. Taylor December 22, 2020 In this story: bright futures, environmental justice
COVID-19 Is a Chance to Reframe How We Use and Abuse Public Land The outdoors needs more people—but fewer of them By Heather Hansman December 22, 2020 In this story: bright futures, hiking