News

Let’s start our journey through this maritime marvel with a stroll down Talbot Street, the main thoroughfare that serves as the town’s beating heart. Brick sidewalks line the street, guiding you past ...
The research in North Carolina documents downstream remnants of the 35-million-year-old tsunami that followed the ...
A major milestone has been reached for Chesapeake Bay Foundation’s Hampton River Restoration Project. According to a release, ...
The migratory comings and goings of fish and fowl create a rhythm on the Chesapeake. Up and down, in and out, back and forth, here and gone; regular as the sun and moon and the seasons, quirky as ...
On a new Bay Area wildfire-risk map that gauges the threat of wind-driven embers, Lars Guntvedt’s neighborhood in the hills above Los Gatos sits in the highest-danger zone. Like many of his of ...
The Chesapeake Bay blue crab could be experiencing a population crash on par with the early 2000s, when experts feared the prized mid-Atlantic species was at risk of hitting unrecoverable levels.
The biggest challenge to cleaning up the Chesapeake Bay is figuring out where the nutrients that fuel summertime dead zones come from — and a new approach to pollution control is stressing ...
The Chesapeake Bay is the healthiest it’s been in a long time, according to the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science. The center’s 2024 ...
Oysters are thriving at the bottom of the Chesapeake Bay, and the news continues to get better for the mollusks and local watermen. In the past 20 years, the oyster population has grown from 2.4 ...
By Jim Parsons The 308-ft-long earth pressure balance machine Chessie mined more than 6,300 ft for the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel’s new parallel tube at Thimble Shoal Channel. Photo courtesy ...
The Chesapeake Bay Legacy Act, a bill introduced by the Moore-Miller Administration in February that seeks to improve the Chesapeake Bay's water quality, is one step closer to becoming a reality.
A new study says the Chesapeake Bay could face marine heat waves for nearly a third of the year by 2100, impacting wildlife, water quality, and Virginia's economy.