ST. MARYS - Despite the cloudy skies and slight drizzle of rain, locals came out in droves Saturday morning to the St. Marys ...
On Thursday in the state legislature’s senate committee on natural resources and wildfire, a bill regarding the Rock Creek ...
"The discovery of the 15 million-year-old freshwater fish fossil offers us an unprecedented opportunity to understand Australia's ancient ecosystems and the evolution of its fish species. "This fossil ...
The Historical Commission met Monday and heard from guest speaker Dan Daugherty, who gave a presentation on “The Old Fish Hatchery: A Storied Past, Present and Future.” Daugherty ...
Due to low estimated return numbers of adult spring Chinook to the Klickitat River, the WDFW has reduced the adult salmon daily limit to one hatchery fish in the lower river and will close the ...
At 2 AM, under the dim glow of streetlights and neon signs, I found myself stepping into a world untouched by time—a 200-year-old fish market that had been thriving long before modern ...
The body of a 2-year-old who went missing on March 1 was found in the Siletz River Tuesday morning, the Lincoln County Sheriff's Office said. Dane Paulsen disappeared from the front yard of his ...
Lincoln County Sheriff's Office A 2-year-old boy was found dead after a ten ... March 11 at around 11:13 a.m. in the Siletz River, the Lincoln County Sheriff's Office in Oregon said in a statement.
The search for two-year-old Oregon toddler Dane Paulsen, who vanished from his family’s yard in Siletz on March 1, remains ongoing as authorities concentrate efforts on the Siletz River.
Authorities said that they had been concentrating their search for 2-year-old Dane Paulsen along the Siletz River, saying the evidence indicated that he was at the river's edge before his ...
A volunteer diver has found the body of the 2-year-old Siletz boy who went missing ... The search eventually focused on the Siletz River, after the Lincoln County Sheriff’s Office concluded ...
A “river monster” isn’t really what it sounds like at first. The expression was popularized by the show that shares the name, but it simply means a massive freshwater fish that lives in a river. We ...