Nearly three decades after it took the involvement of President Clinton to stop a gold mine from being developed on the eastern doorstep of Yellowstone National Park, and five years after the Trump administration withdrew 30,000 acres north of the park from mineral development, a grassroots effort is underway to buy out a fledgling mine project that would be visible from the park and could theoretically send pollution down into the Yellowstone River.
Age is overtaking water and sewer systems at Death Valley National Park, where the National Park Service is proposing to spend more than $40 million on rebuilding key systems.
Thirteen years ago, National Park Trust launched Kids to Parks Day. Held annually on the third Saturday in May, this year’s national day of outdoor park play and recreation will be held on Saturday. For 2023, National Park Trust is teaming up with the American Academy of Pediatrics and Mental Health Awareness Month to promote the many physical and mental health benefits of getting outdoors and enjoying nature and parks.
The harsh winter at Grand Canyon National Park destroyed more than 300 feet of water pipeline servicing the Grand Canyon Lodge, which won't offer overnight accommodations until late July at the earliest.
A 39-year-old resident of El Salvador visiting Buffalo National River is believed to have drowned after disappearing under the water, according to a park release.
It’s been a month since the last quiz, hasn’t it? Or practically a month. Has that been enough time to bone up on your knowledge of national parks and other protected lands? Test your knowledge to see just how much you know.
Two studies – one spotlighting segregation at national parks in Virginia from 1916-1965 and the other showcasing where African Americans recreated from the late 19th through the early 21st century—are setting the stage for new national historic landmark designations, listings on the National Register of Historic Places, and opportunities for national parks to be more candid about their past.