U.S. Department of Interior
U.S. Government: Agencies/Departments/Divisions | Federal Agencies
Recent News About U.S. Department of Interior
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News Release: Hello, Junior Rangers!. Today we're here to remind everyone about the three P's of fire safety. * Prevent - Remember to take all the steps you need to make having a campfire safe for every one. This means pets too!. * Plan - Before you leave home on a camping trip, make a list of the things you will...
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News Release: Are you curious about the people who work in Yellowstone National Park?
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News Release: Are you curious about the people who work in Yellowstone National Park?
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The US Interior Department published a two page notice on March 7, according to the U.S. Government Publishing Office.
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News Release: How do you tell a story?
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News Release: Quick Facts. Location: El Camino Real de los Tejas Visitor Center is part of Goliad State Park & Historic Site; 108 Park Road 6, just west of US highways 77 and 183 and State Highway 239, ¾ mile south of Goliad. Significance: As park visitors move through the three main rooms, they will encounter interpretive...
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News Release: Camping is authorized for overnight horse users only at the visitor horse corrals, with a permit. The visitor horse corrals and campsites at Frijole Horse Corral Campground and Dog Canyon Campground can be reserved in advance of the visit.
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News Release: Prineville, Ore. - The Bureau of Land Management is seeking public input on a proposal to acquire about 4,000 acres of private land along the John Day River.
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News Release: This 1/4 mile trail branches off the Eagle Trail. Start at the Trail Head near the amphitheater and follow Eagle Trail approximately 1/4 mile to reach the Honey Locust Trail.
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News Release: The longest trail in the monument, Eagle Trail is 1/2 mile long. It starts at the trailhead near the amphitheater and ends at the Welcome Center.
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News Release: This 200 yard trail branches off the Deer Loop Trail. Start at the Trail Head near the amphitheater. Take the first right onto Deer Loop Trail and reach the Camel Trail in a few yards.
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News Release: April 2022 - In 2018, the Presidio of San Francisco’s live “Hawk Cam" was established above a nest located 100 feet up in one of the blue gum eucalyptus trees near the Main Post. Over a few seasons, it’s given all of us an up-close and personal look at nesting raptors in the park-and it’s back. The same breeding resident pair of hawks have returned to their nest four years later - and two chicks hatched starting on Easter weekend!.
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News Release: I spent weeks informally observing desert bighorn sheep during the 2020 pandemic closure. My observations show where to take our research.
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News Release: A little advance trip planning can ensure that your only surprises are happy ones. Check out our top 10 insider tips to #PlanLikeAParkRanger.
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News Release: We love hiking in our national parks!.
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News Release: KINICHI WATANABE. Family # 3705. Camp: Manzanar, CA (Address: 27-7-1) and Tule Lake, CA. My father came to the United States in 1920 at the age of 16. He worked as a farm worker in Utah and California. My mother was born in Long Beach, CA, but she grew up in Japan. At the age of 18, she returned to the...
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The restoration of healthy herds of an iconic yet "functionally extinct" species and the prairies it once thrived on is the focus of a newly formed working group.
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News Release: In spring 2022, Cuyahoga Valley National Park (CVNP) is completing a $2 million project to remove 33 vacant structures and restore the land as forest. These buildings were non-historic. The properties were acquired decades ago as the park was established. This long-anticipated project was made possible by funding from the Great American Outdoors Act (GAOA).
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News Release: The Civil War deeply affected the Longfellow family. Three close relatives fought for the Union during the conflict: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s son Charles, nephew Stephen Longfellow, and his wife’s half-brother Nathan Appleton Jr. All three were wounded in action.
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News Release: The park offers diverse riding opportunities to explore the Guadalupe Mountains. Sixty percent of the trails are open to stock use. Those closed to stock are difficult to maintain, or pass through unique and fragile areas intolerant of such use. Stock manure droppings introduce exotic plants that displace native vegetation.