Mushers and dogs cross hills and mountain passes, tundra and forests, rivers and sea ice, and the frigid Bering Sea coast en route to the finish line in Nome. Alaska Native mushers and their dogs ...
This year, the Iditarod saw both a historic anniversary and the marked impact of climate change. Writer Lale Arikoglu follows ...
"It's just a frozen ground and bare, dry tundra grass," Rick Thoman ... in open water on Norton Sound as she approaches Nome, Alaska, March 13, 2019, in the Iditarod trail sled dog race.
From there, they’ll dash to Nome. The Iditarod starts with a parade ... traveled that part of the trail described it as “frozen tundra and straight hell.” Yup! This is the fourth time ...
"It's just a frozen ground and bare, dry tundra grass," Rick Thoman, a climate specialist with the International Arctic Research Center at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, told ABC News.
But despite the presence of 5G in one of the Earth’s most remote locations, fiber connections in the region are much rarer.
started the Iditarod in 1973 after the introduction of snow machines, as snowmobiles are called in Alaska, rendered the ... that read ‘100 Years Nenana to Nome,’ and a dive bar with a ...
Teams of mushers battle through blizzards, subzero temperatures and punishing winds to navigate a wild trail across Alaska during the ... miles from Fairbanks to Nome. Only 33 mushers, tied ...
Iron Dog snowmachine racers that traveled that part of the trail described it as “frozen tundra ... Nome. Ramey Smyth’s team run into Finger Lake during the 2022 Iditarod. (Jeff Chen/Alaska ...
If you’re eyeing a bucket list trip to the frozen tundra of the White Continent ... in Norway’s Svalbard region and head for Nome, Alaska. During the journey, travelers will see surreal landscapes ...
When unseasonably warm temperatures left the Iditarod course unusable, organizers were forced to reconfigure a 1,128-mile course through the Alaskan wilderness. The result is a race like nothing ...