New research explains why forests planted for logging purposes fuel devastating wildfires more often than untouched land.
New research led by the University of Utah shows some types of logging could increase wildfire severity, particularly as the West experiences more extreme weather.
Mark Harmon crouches low next to log number 219: a moss-covered western hemlock tree trunk, five meters long, lying dead on ...
Forest ecologist Mark Harmon has been exhaustively examining dead logs for 40 years, and he’s found a complex world few ...
A new study from Stockholm University reveals that spruce bark beetles, already infamous for killing millions of trees in ...
In the video, which was shared by the Climate Insiders account (@climate_insiders), you can hear the crashing sounds of a ...
The Parks Department wants to plant more trees — it does! — but so many things are conspiring against the agency on Manhattan's worst street.
A new study from Stockholm University reveals that spruce bark beetles, already infamous for killing millions of trees in Sweden, are also changing the forest microclimate. Using a combination of ...
Acres of poplars and soaring red and white oaks, a century or more old, surround a small wooden cabin overlooking a hilltop ...
The Roadless Rule does not limit economic activity in Southeast Alaska; it does the opposite. By keeping new roads out of old ...
City of Middletown Police have charged a 16-year-old boy with the shooting of a 17-year-old boy in a barbershop on West Main Street. The shooting happened at approximately 5:15 p.m. Sept. 3 in the ...
The mining industry is the sector linked to the most attacks against people trying to protect the environment and their ...