Methane gas escaping from ocean floor may be one cause of global warming

Methane gas escaping from ocean floor may be one cause of global warming By Ned Rozell [fusion_dropcap]I[/fusion_dropcap]f the world continues to get warmer, vast amounts of methane gas trapped under the sea could belch up and worsen climate change, according to a study. "We may have less time than we think to do something (about [...]

Alaska’s fish are very clean

Alaska's fish are very clean By Ned Rozell [fusion_dropcap]T[/fusion_dropcap]hough buffered by many hundreds of miles from the world's industrial centers, the far north is not as pristine as it seems. Scientists have found dioxins in the breast milk of Native women in Canada's Arctic and pesticide in the bark of Alaska trees, but a new [...]

The dominant predator of North America?

The dominant predator of North America? By Ned Rozell [fusion_dropcap]I[/fusion_dropcap]n the days when Alaska was a vast grassland, a massive bear hunted the treeless plains. Walking on four lean legs, the giant, short-faced bear loomed larger than the biggest brown bear today. A researcher once described the extinct bear as "the dominant predator of North [...]

Bowhead Whales

Bowhead Whales May Be the World's Oldest Mammals By Ned Rozell [fusion_dropcap]W[/fusion_dropcap]hile helping Alaska Native whale hunter Billy Adams cut sections of blubber from a bowhead whale, Biologist Craig George pressed his knife into a deep scar in the whale's skin. Bowhead whales were hunted by commercial whalers for over four centuries, beginning in the [...]

Salmon nose deep into Alaska ecosystems

Salmon nose deep into Alaska ecosystems By Ned Rozell [fusion_dropcap]D[/fusion_dropcap]uring a good year in Bristol Bay, a surge of more than 100 million pounds of sockeye salmon fights its way upstream, spawns, and dies. In Bristol Bay and elsewhere in Alaska, this incredible pulse of salmon carcasses enriches streams and rivers and makes young fish [...]

Alaska Blackfish In A World Of Its Own

Alaska Blackfish In A World Of Its Own By Ned Rozell [fusion_dropcap]I[/fusion_dropcap]magine a shallow lake north of Hughes, in the cold heart of Alaska. In frigid, sluggish water, dim blue light penetrates two feet of ice. The ice has a quarter-size hole, maintained by a stream of methane bubbles. Every few minutes, a brutish little [...]

Mastodons long gone from the north

Mastodons long gone from the north By Ned Rozell [fusion_dropcap]A[/fusion_dropcap] long, long time ago, a hairy elephant stomped the northland, wrecking trees and shrubs as it swallowed twigs, leaves and bark. These mastodons left a few scattered teeth and bones in Alaska and the Yukon, reminders of an immense mammal that lived as far south [...]