NEW MEXICO (KRQE) – A new report predicts New Mexico will have 25% less water in our rivers and streams by 2050 because of climate change. A state law enacted nearly 20 years ago has aimed to ...
Near Ruidoso, New Mexico lies a 19th century military fort, now a state historic site, surrounded by public land and thick, ...
Armed with new protections, this turtle could be the catalyst for halting a huge and controversial engineering project ...
Andy Robertson’s geospatial services team employees more than 50 students, who create high-tech digital maps. “Picture Google ...
Water officials expect minimal flows of the Rio Grande around Albuquerque. It is possible for some of the river to dry in the coming days or weeks. That announcement was made by the Middle Rio ...
As an engineer, wastewater operator, water planner and Bosque bicyclist, Elizabeth Anderson has been up close and personal ...
Tauck Unveils New Tool to Help Travel Advisors Sell More Group River Cruises Make your client’s next long ... Majestic Resorts! You will... Discover Mexico for the Western Traveler Part 1Friday, ...
Nearly half of the water drawn from the Colorado River goes to feed for beef and dairy cows. Researchers say modest changes ...
The footprints, dating back to the Early Cretaceous period, were found in Brazil and in Cameroon, researchers wrote in a study published Monday by the New Mexico Museum of Natural History & Science.
Colorado authorities allow private ownership of riverbeds while other states, including Montana, New Mexico, and Nevada, treat rivers deemed “navigable” at statehood as public. But ...
For a century after Christopher Columbus, this town was the white-hot center of global exploration, teeming with sailors ...
A new book by the journalist Bartle Bull recounts ... Share full article A 15th-century painting of the Tigris River in Baghdad. Iraq has long been a melting pot of traditions, languages and ...