Greenland Races Into New Era Without Losing Grip on Inuit Traditions
Amid dizzying changes caused by a warming climate and global attention, Greenlanders don’t want to have to choose between embracing the future and honoring their heritage.
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Amid dizzying changes caused by a warming climate and global attention, Greenlanders don’t want to have to choose between embracing the future and honoring their heritage.
A man who voted for Donald Trump claims he doesn’t regret his decision, even though the president’s mass deportation order has threatened to tear his family apart, Newsweek reported.Bradley Bartell’s Peruvian-born wife Camila Muñoz was detained by ICE…
In a CNN interview Monday, the executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union likened the arrest of a pro-Palestinian Columbia University student to 1950s McCarthyism.
The name of Sen. Joseph McCarthy, who led the “Red Scare” congression…
Caleb Vitello has been removed from his post as acting director of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, according to The Wall Street Journal.A Department of Homeland Security spokeswoman told the Journal that Vitello “will remain at ICE and will …
President Donald Trump’s “border Czar” Tom Homan, who has been tasked with deporting millions of undocumented migrants from the United States, made an enemy out of “the wrong Latina” when he went after Rep. Alexandra Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY), argued MSNBC…
The French president has called for action at a climate summit in Paris attended by heads of state and scientists before Cop28France will spend €1bn (£880m) on polar research between now and 2030, amid rapidly rising scientific concern over the world’s…
Some glaciers on the island are melting at double the rate of just a few decades ago.
It may be too late to halt the decline of the West Antarctic ice shelves, a study found, but climate action could still forestall the gravest sea level rise.
As the earth warms, glacial archaeologists are in a race against time to preserve objects before they are destroyed by the elements. Recent field work yielded a surprisingly intact 3,000-year-old arrow.
A rediscovered sample of frozen sediment, collected more than 50 years ago, highlights the vulnerability of Greenland’s ice sheet to a warming climate.