News

From coastlines to heartland, new research suggests the very geography of the United States could be dramatically altered by ...
Holy Cross Energy held its annual meeting and board of directors election on June 5 at Buttermilk Mountain Lodge. Three ...
Snow albedo, also known as snow brightness, started near average in early May and then rapidly decreased until storms in the ...
Phillips 66 grew its midstream segment so much that activist investor Elliott Management pushed to splinter the company—but ...
Kayaking in Texas is very surprising and interesting. From paddling through cities to exploring the Gulf Coast and Rio Grande ...
The Colorado River basin has lost huge volumes of groundwater over the past two decades according to a new report from ...
The Colorado River basin has lost a Lake Mead’s worth of water in the last 20 years — and scientists say we’re passing a ...
As Colorado River experts and advocates gather for an annual conference, a scientist's harsh climate warning clouds efforts ...
WASHINGTON — The federal government is expected to announce water cuts soon that would affect some of the 40 million people reliant on the Colorado River, the powerhouse of the U.S. West.
Optimism is a rare breed in Arizona water politics, filled as it is with intractable conflicts over overstressed aquifers and a declining Colorado River. But Arizona water chief Tom Buschatzke ...
Even-steven. That was the intent of delegates from the seven basin states in 1922 when they met near Santa Fe to forge a compact governing the Colorado River. But what exactly did they agree upon?
Mr. Chiaramonte was an investigative reporter and producer at Fox News, a correspondent for the New York Post, and a news editor for the Messenger.