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The northern end of the 414-mile Dalton Highway, the only road link to the North Slope oil fields, is seen underwater on May 21, 2015. (From Alaska DOTPF) The extreme flooding that forced a weeks ...
The massive 2015 flooding of the Sagavanirktok River in northern Alaska had immediate impacts, including closure of the Dalton Highway for several days, but it also contributed to longer-term ...
Alaska’s governor has declared a state of emergency over flooding that washed out a section of the Dalton Highway, the sole overland link between Prudhoe Bay and the state’s largest cities ...
The massive 2015 flooding of the Sagavanirktok River in northern Alaska had immediate impacts, including closure of the Dalton Highway for several days, but it also contributed to longer-term ...
Alaska's Dalton Highway again at risk of severe flooding after 2015 closure Rachel D'Oro, Associated Press Mar 23, 2016 Updated Jun 12, 2019 ...
The Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities said the Dalton Highway has reopened after an Arctic river flooded, closing the supply route for 18 days.
Concern continues about flooding on the northern end of the Dalton Highway. Water from the Sag River overran the Dalton south of Deadhorse last year, causing extensive damage that closed the road ...
Almost a year after flooding destroyed part of the Dalton Highway, temporarily severing the North Slope's land access, Alaska transportation officials are bolstering the road's defenses against a ...
Dubbed the Haul Road, the mostly gravel Dalton Highway is a 414-mile, often desolate stretch that begins near Fairbanks and leads to Deadhorse, the oil-industry town serving Prudhoe Bay.
The extreme flooding that forced a weeks-long closure of Alaska’s only highway to the North Slope in the spring of 2015 also had longer-term effects on permafrost thaw, according to ...
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