Conclusion by Annika Ord

Knowing Our Changing Home Conclusion By Annika Ord In Alaska, weather isn’t just a topic for small talk and brief encounters, it dictates whether our freezers are full and our grocery stores stocked. It impacts…

Foreword by Kristin Timm

Knowing Our Changing Home FOREWORD By Kristin Timm As a kid growing up in Wisconsin, I remember always sledding on Thanksgiving morning. Somewherearound the time I stopped sledding, sledding on Thanksgiving morning stopped too. There…

Berry-stained Science in a Changing Climate

A ripe salmonberry, ready to be eaten.

Up the Taku River, a washtub sank under the weight of red jewels, glittering in the sunlight. A family skiff held thousands of ripe nagoonberries and strawberries, evidence of a long day of harvest.

70,000 Walrus, Seals and Sea Ice

Walrus haul-out on a beach near Utqiaġvik.

The loss of Arctic sea ice has cycled through headlines for decades, rising and falling in public attention as new records are broken. But for researchers like Maeghan Connor and Donna Hauser, sea ice loss is not a trending headline, it is the focus of their lives’ work.

Ice science from pre-k to gray

Father Thinh Van Tran with his boat before the river starts to freeze.

Father Thinh Van Tran knows about ice. A Catholic priest who serves the Diocese of Fairbanks, he’s spent time in the remote rural Alaska communities of Nulato, Koyukuk, Galena and Kaltag, deep in Interior Alaska. During that time he’s come to appreciate how river ice serves as a major transportation corridor for these communities.

Caribou Herds in Arctic Alaska Tundra Areas are on Opposite Trends

A caribou is seen in Gates of the Arctic National Park and Preserve.

The Western Arctic Caribou Herd, once the biggest in Alaska, is faltering, having fallen from a high of 490,000 animals in 2003 to only 152,000 as of 2023. But to the east, the Porcupine Caribou Herd appears to be thriving, with an all-time high of 218,00 animals recorded at the last census.