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News
Alaska Science Forum: Grains of Alaska made into art
“I can hand a piece of the Yukon River or Mendenhall Glacier to someone thousands of miles away…”
October 6, 2022
News
Alaska Science Forum: Alaska megastorms vs. East Coast hurricanes
Unlike the giant storm that hit Alaska in mid-September, hurricanes and typhoons both have eyes.
September 29, 2022
News
On the Trails: Water drops on plants
Guttation drops contain not only water but also sugars, proteins, and probably minerals.
September 26, 2022
News
On the Trails: Electric flowers and platform plants
You cannot see it, it’s electric.
September 19, 2022
News
Alaska Science Forum: Where do Alaska bats spend the winter?
I think bats do hibernate in interior Alaska…”
September 15, 2022
News
Ancient weir sheds new light on Alaska Native history
Stone fish trap dates to at least 11,100 years ago, according to scientists.
September 15, 2022
News
On the Trails: All about beavers
Leave it to ‘em.
September 5, 2022
News
Alaska Science Forum: Chasing the sun from New York to Alaska
Around the country in a day.
September 2, 2022
News
Alaska Science Forum: If a lake drains in northern Alaska…
Rarely do people get to see it.
August 18, 2022
News
On the Trails: Sights and sounds from the trails in late summer
Winged wonders abound.
August 15, 2022
News
Alaska Science Forum: Secrets of an ancient horse of the Yukon
The Yukon is a great place to find the preserved remains of ancient creatures.
August 11, 2022
News
The SalmonState: Bringing the sockeye home
Klawock Indigenous Stewards and partners are working to a once prolific sockeye salmon run.
August 9, 2022
News
On the Trails: The colorful world of birds
Colors are produced by cell structure, which can scatter light rays, making iridescence, and by pigments, which absorb…
August 8, 2022
News
On the Trails: Bricolage — this and that, bits and pieces
There were good minus tides in May and June, and I went out with some friends to take…
August 1, 2022
News
Alaska Science Forum: High-country Eden for sockeye salmon
“It’s the largest sockeye hatchery in the world. Two-hundred and sixty miles from the ocean.”
July 28, 2022
News
Alaska Science Forum: A field guide to old coffee cans
Can you dig it?
July 21, 2022
News
On the Trails: Fun in Gustavus
A walk near a shallow lake was the highlight.
July 18, 2022
News
Alaska Science Forum: 110 years since the largest Alaska eruption
“Stretching as far as the eye could reach … were hundreds — no, thousands — of little volcanoes.”
July 14, 2022
News
On the Trails: Buttercups and their relatives
“Buttercups”—the name conjures up an image of lots of bright yellow flowers, which we enjoyed recently in Cowee…
July 11, 2022
News
On the Trails: Oystercatchers, pinesap and spittlebugs
At the mouth of Cowee Creek, sometime in mid-June, we’d found a vigilant pair of black oystercatchers, presumably…
July 4, 2022
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