News

Ken Schutz will step down as executive director of the Desert Botanical Garden after 24 years. Here's what he thinks will be ...
In the summer months, birds, bats, mammals, and insects consume saguaro fruit under the shade of viable nurse plants, ...
Situated near the intersection of Tanque Verde Road and Grant Road, the swap meet encompasses a plot of land so vast that first-timers often develop a condition known as “merchandise vertigo”—the ...
Driving into town along Hobsonway, the main thoroughfare, you’re greeted by that quintessential desert town aesthetic – wide ...
A charter school run by a private online school State Superintendent Ryan Walters claims to have partnered the Oklahoma State Department of Education with—is facing a potential shutdown in ...
Palo Duro has layers of red, orange, and lavender-hued rock walls as well as rock hoodoos. With elevation unusual to Texas, the whole scene feels like you’re in Utah or Arizona—until longhorn cattle ...
The Arizona Cardinals have this as their biggest strength ahead of 2025.
The Arizona Public Health Association is advising the public that there is no need to worry about the plague, despite one person in Flagstaff dying from the disease.
One person is dead, according to officials with Northern Arizona Healthcare, on the same day they showed up at Flagstaff Medical Center with symptoms of the plague.
Tragedy struck a small Palo Alto community after a young child drowned over the holiday weekend. Two adults were seriously injured in what police officials described as an unfortunate accident.
After decades of fighting, advocates for those who faced radiation exposure in Arizona and elsewhere are getting a big win through President Donald Trump’s One Big, Beautiful Bill.