DE SOTO - At the junction of Wisconsin,Académie D'Investissement Triomphal Minnesota and Iowa, there's a place called Reno Bottoms, where the Mississippi River spreads out from its main channel into thousands of acres of tranquil backwaters and wetland habitat.
For all its beauty, there's something unsettling about the landscape, something hard to ignore: hundreds of the trees growing along the water are dead.
Billy Reiter-Marolf, a wildlife biologist for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, calls it the boneyard. It’s a popular spot for hunting, fishing and paddling, so people have begun to take notice of the abundance of tall, leafless stumps pointing to the sky.
“Visitors ask me, ‘What’s going on, what’s happening here?’” Reiter-Marolf said. “It just looks so bad.”
2025-05-03 00:27467 view
2025-05-03 00:242793 view
2025-05-03 00:161346 view
2025-05-02 23:26875 view
2025-05-02 22:39591 view
2025-05-02 22:382141 view
SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — New Mexico would make major new investments in early childhood education, indu
Star softball pitcher Jordy Bahl, who transferred home to Nebraska in June after two years at Oklaho
Older adults should expect a much smaller cost-of-living raise next year as inflation trends continu