Latest Local News
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Five years to the day that Navajo elder Ella Mae Begay disappeared from her home, the man who acknowledged beating her, stealing her truck and leaving her on the roadside is free from prison.
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The national guidelines would establish recreational climbing as an appropriate use of Forest Service lands and would also allow more fixed anchors in wilderness areas.
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Researchers say decades of dry, hot conditions have killed pinyon pine and juniper forests across the West.
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Though the price of gas at the pump is falling, it’s still roughly $1 higher in Arizona than it was a year ago, due in part to the war with Iran. That’s putting a squeeze on the river rafting economy.
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The Tohono O'odham Nation wants a federal judge to immediately halt pending plans by the Department of Homeland Security to build 62 miles of border wall through the reservation.
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The Coppermine Chapter voted overwhelmingly to adopt a resolution opposing mining projects like the kind Essential Minerals wants to build.
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Land managers say a fire burning near the Utah-Arizona state line has grown to more than 2,200 acres and is now 5% contained.
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The Forest Service says it's fully staffed with seasonal firefighters going into summer but there are still questions about whether the government is prepared if major wildfires get out of hand.
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Scientists with the U.S. Geological Survey have found evidence of human contamination and forever chemicals in Monument Springs and other remote springs within Grand Canyon National Park.
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A project below Glen Canyon Dam is targeting invasive smallmouth bass that threaten native fish in the Colorado River.
NPR News
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The shallow, sunny waters of the reflecting pool are an ideal incubator for algae growth in the summertime. Experts say the recent renovation may have helped accelerate it.
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Health officials and researchers hope that efforts to control deer populations, which serve as "party buses" for mating ticks, can reverse the tide of ticks and the illnesses they cause.
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The U.S.-Iran talks that were set to happen in Switzerland have been canceled. And, the Department of Homeland Security has plans to give some local police access to ICE facial recognition technology.
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A planned U.S.-Iran meeting was abruptly postponed, leaving the initial agreement to end the war on shaky ground.
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A look at the hardliner leading Iran's negotiating team wit the U.S. to end the war.
KNAU’s daily local news podcast
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Hot again Thursday with one last afternoon of isolated showers and thunderstorms. We then turn completely dry, breezy and slightly less hot Friday into the weekend ahead.
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