Last week we mentioned that Crystal Cave at Sequoia National Park was reopening to the public for the first time since 2021. Now we're going to tell you where else in the National Park System you can go underground.
Contributing photographer Rebecca Latson discusses food photography and even cooked up some recipes from a national park cookbook she reviews for this month’s photography article.
A 74-year-old man described as an "avid and experienced hiker" collapsed and died roughly a half-mile from completing a rim-to-rim hike at Grand Canyon National Park.
New River Gorge National Park and Preserve in West Virginia is home to one of the oldest rivers on the continent. New River flows through 70,000 acres (>28,000 hectares) of landscape rich in mixed mesophytic forest habitat, the history of natives, pioneers, coal miners, and loggers, and plenty of outdoor activities from hiking to scenic drives.
Concerns that erosion where the Appomattax and James rivers meet in Virginia will erase archaeological, architectural, cultural and natural resources at Grant's Headquarters in Petersburg National Battlefield has the National Park Service proposing to stabilize a bluff.
It’s unusual for members of Congress to have nothing to say on legislation. But there was ample silence from Republicans when the House Natural Resources Committee crafted how and where to slash Interior Department and other agencies’ funding, including for the National Park Service.
A Freedom of Information Act-triggered paper dump from the Interior Department provides a sturdy outline of Interior Secretary Doug Burgum’s fervid drive to mine, log, and drill public lands. But it is woefully short on details.
A 400-pound grizzly who overcame 800-pound bear-resistant dumpsters by flipping them was put down in Yellowstone National Park because of its determination to obtain human foods.