News

Republican Lisa Murkowski helped secure aid for her home state, as Democrats see a “polar payoff.” ...
An 800-pound Alaska brown bear named Tundra just got the largest dental crown ever made. The bear is so big that the ...
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) - A 144-pound halibut has placed a Fairbanks woman at the top of the board in the Valdez Halibut ...
Expanding oil and gas development in the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska could threaten these birds by disrupting their ...
Alaska's remote terrain hosts bald eagles, brown bears, whales, aiding over 1,000 species; caribou and Arctic foxes thrive inland.
A new push for more oil and gas drilling, mining, and logging threatens irreparable damage to irreplaceable habitats.
A dive into what changes the U.S. Senate is considering for Arctic oil and gas, Ambler Road, and what it could mean for ...
Opinion
Military Aviation History on MSN14dOpinion
From Crewman to Fighter: A Caribou Turned Battlefield
Vietnam War veteran Brian Richards recounts a rare and harrowing moment: hand-to-hand combat aboard a military aircraft. As a Caribou pilot, he experienced not just flight danger - but physical ...
Two Pennsylvania men had several close encounters with Alaska brown bears during a May hunt that ended with one of them getting a massive trophy-sized bruin. Big game hunter John Neilson Jr., 39 ...
Alaska's caribou are an important source of food and cultural identity for Alaskans, especially in rural communities that depend on them. ... The Red Dog mine is a big facility.
Alaska needs to revamp its outdated Intensive Management Law, passed in 1994 to ensure that certain populations of moose, caribou and deer are sufficient to provide food for Alaskans.
Alaska’s 1994 “Intensive Management” law established the harvesting of meat from Alaska’s big game species as the management priority in most of the state.