Press Releases

All GI press releases are displayed here. You may select a group from the list on the left to view a more targeted selection of press releases.

<p>One fall day in Interior Alaska, a lion stalked a ground squirrel that stood exposed on a hillside like a foot-long sandwich. The squirrel saw bending blades of grass, squeaked an alarm call, and then dived into its hole. It curled up in a grassy nest. A few months later, for reasons unknown, its heart stopped during hibernation.</p> <p>Twenty thousand years later, Ben Gaglioti is teasing apart the mummified ground squirrel’s cache in an attempt to better reconstruct what Alaska was like during the days of the mammoth, bison, wild horse and camel.</p>
<p>After a few chaotic, free-form weeks in Haiti, an Alaska geologist reported that he and a team of others didn&rsquo;t find the rips in the ground they were looking for following the early January e
<p>Garbage allows gulls to thrive in the oilfields of northern Alaska, and furry little pikas might be changing their body shapes in response to changes in climate, according to two graduate students
<p>More than a century ago, eight prospectors were panning the glacial sands near Hubbard Glacier when the earth starting shaking and never seemed to stop. A few days later, they had survived a natura
<p>SAM CHARLEY SLOUGH &mdash; Winter travelers on the Tanana River can save a mile by taking the shortcut through this serpentine channel rather than following a lazy bend of the big river, but experi
<p>About 150 years ago, U.S. Secretary of State William Seward was taking some heat for his significant role in the purchase of Alaska. On the day the Russians received the $7.2 million check, a group
<p>During the next month, while many of us are sleeping, Alaska&rsquo;s population will increase by millions. The migrant birds are returning, and, thanks to tracking technology that gets better each
<p>Stephen Jewett has dived in ocean waters from one end of Alaska to the other, but he has never seen an underwater landscape as barren as one he saw last summer.</p> <p>“Diving off Nome where they were doing offshore dredging (for gold) was close, but nothing compares to what we found around Kasatochi,” said Jewett, who dives as part of his job with the University of Alaska Fairbanks’ School of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences.</p>
<p>KOLIGANEK &mdash; This village in southwest Alaska, so small it doesn&rsquo;t have its own zip code, is of great interest to Kenji Yoshikawa. It once had permafrost, but he&rsquo;s not finding it n
<p>On a fine spring day about 70 million years ago, a few dozen duck-billed dinosaurs waded a channel of a great northern river. As they strode on two legs into the cloudy water, the man-size hadrosau
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