We’d been through this a million times before,” Jackson Wootton, a CU Boulder student from California said. “All throughout high school, living in Los Angeles, there’s constantly
Urban wildfires like those that continue to rage in Los Angeles and the one in Colorado ... ordinary in the high desert foothills of Boulder County, Colorado, so Allison Bequette wasn’t terribly ...
These jaw-dropping rock walls flanking Green Mountain have become the symbol of the city, with many Boulder businesses sporting their image as a logo. Flatirons One through Five are the most ...
The causes of the wind-driven fires that burned thousands of homes in the Los Angeles area are under investigation, but there were no lightning strikes reported at the time. The chemicals emitted ...
Before the wildfire that destroyed thousands of homes, Altadena was already debating a tense question: should new housing be built in places that could burn?
The situation regarding climate change is by no means hopeless. The impact of climate change can be mitigated by sharp reductions in the use of fossil fuels. Water conservation, reuse and
NOAA satellites paired with AI data analysis also generate alerts but over a wider area. They can detect heat signatures, map fire perimeters and burned areas, and track smoke and pollutants to assess air quality and health risks.
A public insurance adjuster may help negotiate a better insurance payout for residents who lost their homes in the Los Angeles wildfires.
Boulder County nonprofit Colorado Horse Rescue is celebrating a new chapter with the expansion of its app, HorseAlert.
A new attribution analysis found that climate heating caused by burning fossil fuels significantly increased the likelihood of extreme fire conditions.
On Friday, community members, local representatives and members of the Boulder-Fire Rescue department gathered at 2967 Bluff Street for the grand opening of the new Boulder Fire-Rescue Station 3.
Global warming caused mainly by burning of fossil fuels made the hot, dry and windy conditions that drove the recent deadly fires around Los Angeles about 35 times more likely to occur, an international team of scientists concluded in a rapid attribution analysis released Tuesday.