America has always stripped the land of its original, Indigenous names. It's had surprising climate implications.
President Trump’s executive order to rename the Alaska peak — North America’s highest — perplexes and worries many who live in its snow-shrouded midst.
The Associated Press on MSN9d
Call it Denali, says new bill introduced by Alaska’s two US senatorsAlaska’s Republican U.S. senators have introduced legislation seeking to designate North America’s tallest peak as Denali.
The battle over what to call North America’s highest peak has entered the U.S. Senate as Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) ...
Denali National Park and Preserve checks all of the Alaska boxes: unspoiled wilderness, roaming wildlife, massive glaciers ...
Republican support for the bill may be scarce because it requires defying a Trump order. He wants to revert to the name Mount ...
With stamps of approval from the Alaska House of Representatives and Senate, the federal government will receive a petition ...
President Donald Trump issued an executive order recently changing the name of the mountain known as Denali to Mount McKinley ...
Unless something changes, only six search-and-rescue rangers will care for up to 500 climbers on North America's highest peak this season.
Demonstrating bicameral and bipartisan disapproval of Trump’s resurrection of the name Mount McKinley, the state’s Senate on ...
Senator Murkowski claimed that her bill was not a "political issue" because Alaskans from "every walk of life" have been ...
Senior Katie Howell explores the issues with the recent executive order to change Denali’s name back to Mount McKinley.
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