In what may be the most glaring example of climate change...
The Klamath Tribes possess the oldest water rights in the...
  The Navajo Nation Council has voted to form a limited...
Tribal culture may benefit from some of nearly $1 million...
Today the mouth of the Mississippi River will drink from...
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Environment

When 750 Nez Perce, accompanied by 1,000 horses, fled the U.S...
Tribal leaders, want the deets on your power plant's greenhouse gas inventories and how to calculate emissions reductions from clean energy programs?...
A group of Anishinabe women with expertise in halting unwanted projects that threaten the environment are determined to stop a proposed shipment of steam generators contaminated wi...
It was a perfect day in the South Pacific—it had to be, for the military operation to take place—when one Native man underwent experiences he relates to the nuclear catastrophe occ...
Science Daily reports on a recent study by Baylor University geology researchers that shows it was prehistoric American Indians, not Europeans, who had dramatically reshaped the ea...
With 884 million, or one in eight people, lacking access to safe drinking water and 2.6 billion without toilets, the United Nations marked World Water Day with a call to attend to ...
ICTMN Staff
March 21, 2011
Arctic sea ice is as much a partner in daily Inuit life as the people themselves, and now a new online, interactive atlas is charting the permutations of that ice, accompanied by e...
Canada may hold the key to the world’s survival, steward as it is of the world’s largest intact forest, which contains more unfrozen water than any other ecosystem, a major U.S...
ICTMN Staff
March 19, 2011
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's Midwest Region explains its special responsibilities in maintaining tribal relations...
Jack McNeel
March 18, 2011
They’ve given them a home where the buffalo roam. Now Yakama Nation leaders are waiting to see if the antelope will play...

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