BY BRIAN MAFFLY
If you could float over Utah's Mussentuchit Badlands, you might see them.
Centuries ago, American Indians aligned rocks into patterns as if sending messages to the gods.... Read Original Story
BY JUSTIN HORWATH
New Mexico’s two U.S. senators say they will introduce legislation that would require companies digging for hard-rock minerals on public lands to pay royalties to help cover the... Read Original Story
BY ANDREW BERNIER
While held up by politics and economics, the nation’s largest forest thinning project is founded on partnerships and sound science. Even though it is well behind schedule,... Read Original Story
LUCKY SEVERSON, correspondent
These are Navajo horsemen in a place called Bears Ears, celebrating a most unusual event—25 tribes coming together for a single grand cause. They want Congress or the... Read Original Story
BY DENIS WAGGONER
As president of the Escalante-Boulder Chamber of Commerce I would like to respond to the statements that the town of Escalante is dying because of the creation of Grand Staircase... Read Original Story
Despite its remote location, the Colorado River at the bottom of the Grand Canyon is dealing with pollution. A new study from the United States Geological Survey (USGS) found high levels of mercury... Read Original Story
BY OSHA GRAY DAVIDSON
By almost any calculation, the Colorado River at the bottom of the Grand Canyon is one of the most isolated places in the contiguous United States. Although about half a million... Read Original Story
BY WAYNE PADGETT
First, something about me. I retired in 2013 after working 25 years for the U.S. Forest Service (USFS) at the forest, region and national levels and five years for the Utah State... Read Original Story