News

NEW ORLEANS — Louisiana has officially canceled the $3 billion Mid-Barataria Sediment Diversion—the largest single ecosystem ...
By Sid Salter Columnist Mississippians are generally a generous and empathetic people. We sincerely feel the pain of others ...
Bill Hardin, a popular former Mississippi State College of Business professor and current dean of Florida International ...
County conservation district leaders from across Pennsylvania watched after a heavy rain Wednesday as iron-laced water oozed from an acid mine seep. Decades ago, the water would have rolled into an ...
It turns out that rivers choose their path based on erosion – a discovery that could transform flood planning and restoration.
Flood watches are in effect for the southern half of Louisiana, including Lake Charles, Lafayette and New Orleans, as well as the immediate coastline of Mississippi.
Why do some rivers split? UCSB scientists found the answer—and it could change how we restore and manage waterways.
This weekend across Rochester, Southern Minnesota, and the Upper Mississippi River Valley, expect hazy skies and occasional ...
The environmental nonprofit Wings2Water has awarded $26,000 to local organizations whose projects aim to address water ...
Rivers are Earth’s arteries. Water, sediment and nutrients self-organize into diverse, dynamic channels as they journey from the mountains to the sea.
On a recent flight home to Salt Lake City, I gazed out the window and shuddered. The ground below was riddled with cracks.