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Invasive species get the ax

Durango removing nonnative trees from riverside property

Fruits may need thinning for growth, flavor

Fruit trees that were so full of blossoms this spring that they looked like giant snowballs foretell a heavy crop of fruit later this year. Too heavy. Too much, perha...

Yellowstone grizzly rebound questioned

BILLINGS, Mont. – Flaws in how the government measures Yellowstone’s grizzly bear population raise questions about whether the animals have recovered sufficiently to merit lifting federal pr...

Earth Briefs

Chimney Rock Festival to be held June 29, 30 Chimney Rock Interpretive Association will host the Life at Chimney Rock Festival from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. June 29 and 30 at Chimney Roc...

Couple set to ride through grasslands

Colorado College grads plan horseback prairie study

Cattlemen still riding fence line

For more than 60 years, local group has guarded ranchers’ interests

Scientists: Soggy British weather likely to stay

LONDON – The best advice for visitors to Britain – pack an umbrella – is more vital than ever. Weather scientists said this week that a country that has been unusually soggy in re...

Energy emissions rose to record high in 2012

But U.S. carbon pollutions drops

Wolves may lose protections

Feds consider tossing protections; scientists say now is not the time

New York City plan addresses effects of global warming

Levees, removable walls proposed for protection

Community gardens take root

More kids learn how to grow their own food

Earth Briefs

New Moon Astro-Tour to be held Saturday Durango Nature Studies’ New Moon Astro-Tour will be held from 9 to 11 p.m. Saturday at Durango Nature Center. The tour is fre...