Echoes of the Fort McMurray Disaster as Fire Sweeps Into Jasper, Alberta
About a third of the buildings in the mountain resort town have burned, raising questions about preparedness and the role of climate change.
By Ian Austen
About a third of the buildings in the mountain resort town have burned, raising questions about preparedness and the role of climate change.
By Ian Austen
The former president met with the Israeli leader in Florida, a day after his main opponent, Vice President Kamala Harris, and he both criticized Israel’s conduct of the war.
By Michael Gold and Matthew Mpoke Bigg
Blazes that generate such stormy conditions can be nearly impossible to put out and pose special dangers to firefighters.
By Austyn Gaffney
Devastating wildfires have forced thousands of residents and tourists to evacuate Jasper, Canada.
By Reuters, The Associated Press and Miriam Crawley Via Storyful
Fast-moving fires have destroyed a third of the buildings in the picturesque town of Jasper, Alberta, and its national park. But the mayor hopes to rebuild.
By Ian Austen
Plus, top Mexican cartel leaders arrested.
By Tracy Mumford, Ruth Igielnik, Natalie Kitroeff, Ian Stewart and Jessica Metzger
Fires have burned hundreds of thousands of acres in the western United States and Canada, prompting evacuations and blanketing cities in smoke.
By The New York Times
The large blazes prompted officials to issue evacuation orders and warnings about air quality.
By Ang Li
As much as half of Jasper, Alberta, which lies inside one of the country’s most-visited national parks, has been destroyed, officials said.
By Ian Austen and Vjosa Isai
Thousands of tourists and local residents have been evacuated from the park in Alberta, Canada.
By The New York Times
Wildfire smoke from the Western United States and Canada is blowing across the Northeast, lowering air quality and endangering vulnerable populations.
By Austyn Gaffney
Two Russian and two Chinese bombers patrolled the airspace near American territory and were intercepted by U.S. and Canadian jets.
By Paul Sonne
Active wildfires have forced communities to evacuate as the blaze left much of the region in ashes, including parts of Jasper National Park.
By AFP and Reuters
The authorities arrested a man believed to have started the fire north of Sacramento. A second fire in eastern Oregon, affecting more than 268,000 acres, is now the largest in the country.
By Heather Knight, Mike Baker and Amanda Holpuch
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Defying sanctions, Russia has obtained nearly $4 billion in restricted chips since the war began in Ukraine. Many were shipped through a cluster of shell companies in Hong Kong.
By Aaron Krolik and Paul Mozur
Scientists found an unexpected aging pattern in a mostly intact juvenile mammal skeleton from the paleontological period.
By Jack Tamisiea
There were more than 160 active wildfires in Alberta on Monday, with around 7,500 people under evacuation orders.
By Reuters and Storyful
Large blazes in the province have led to the evacuation of thousands of people.
By Qasim Nauman
James Brett Clibbery and his wife, Sarah Justine Packwood, had left Nova Scotia on June 11, bound for the Azores. The authorities recovered remains believed to be theirs earlier this month.
By Derrick Bryson Taylor
China and India have been accused of exploiting the opaque nomination contests of Canadian political parties to meddle in elections.
By Norimitsu Onishi
While a listeria contamination of 18 nondairy milk alternatives has killed two people and sickened 10 more, Danone seems to be concealing a key fact.
By Ian Austen
The country’s struggle to reach an informal military spending target highlights how difficult it is for the alliance to quickly bolster its abilities.
By Matina Stevis-Gridneff
A common antibiotic, doxycycline, greatly reduced cases of syphilis, gonorrhea and chlamydia when taken every day, a study found.
By Apoorva Mandavilli
The Silk and Great Value brand drinks made from nuts, oats and coconuts were pulled from stores last week.
By Ian Austen
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Major roads and freeways were shut down in Canada’s largest city amid heavy rainfall and flash flooding.
By The New York Times
More than 167,000 customers lost power on Tuesday after severe thunderstorms.
By Yan Zhuang
For the first time, the government will set a cap on visas for temporary residents, including temporary workers and students, this fall.
By Vjosa Isai
The reports were tantalizing, but someone else was behind the expensive purchase.
By Rukmini Callimachi and Vivian Marino
An increase of more than 8 percent will take effect on Sept. 1. The base membership will go up by $5, to $65 per year.
By Hank Sanders
This documentary follows a renowned Inuit activist over seven years, making sense of the ways in which racism and impoverishment can abrade one’s sense of self.
By Devika Girish
British Columbia’s partial retreat from an experiment to decriminalize drug possession reveals a political shift in Canada over combating the opioid crisis.
By Vjosa Isai and Alana Paterson
Andrea Skinner said in The Toronto Star that her stepfather sexually abused her at age 9, and that her mother stayed with him after she learned of it.
By Elizabeth A. Harris
Oil sands companies pushing a carbon capture project shut down their website after a law banning misleading environmental claims was passed.
By Ian Austen
British Columbia recognized the Haida’s aboriginal title to their islands decades after the Indigenous group launched a battle on the ground and in the courts.
By Norimitsu Onishi and Amber Bracken
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After a last-minute setback, the Canadian Canoe Museum has finally opened its new building in Ontario.
By Ian Austen
In a changing climate, extreme wildfire events are becoming far more common and more intense, according to a new analysis.
By Austyn Gaffney
Edmonton’s mayor says that the issues behind homelessness, opioid overdoses and mental health crises cannot be fixed by cities.
By Ian Austen
Prosecutors say that Nikhil Gupta, at the behest of an Indian government official, tried to engage a hit man to kill an American citizen who is a Sikh separatist.
By Maia Coleman
Families of patients in a Cold War-era mind-control experiment in Montreal are pressing forward after a recent setback in their class-action lawsuit.
By Vjosa Isai
Human rights groups are urging Canada to stop holding migrants seeking asylum in jails, often with people accused of violent crimes.
By Ian Austen
The return of the Edmonton Oilers to the Stanley Cup finals after 18 years has brightened up Alberta’s capital after some difficult times.
By Ian Austen
Ernest Shackleton was sailing for Antarctica on the ship, called the Quest, when he died in 1922. Researchers exulted over the discovery of its wreckage, 62 years after it sank in the Labrador Sea.
By Hank Sanders
In a cold, remote corner of northern Quebec, a sexual abuse scandal pushed a church to the edge. The Rev. Gérard Tsatselam, from Cameroon, must comfort the afflicted to bring it back.
By Norimitsu Onishi and Renaud Philippe
The Group of 7 gathers major industrialized countries, but its leaders are politically weak and Ukraine and Gaza remain unsolved.
By Mark Landler and Steven Erlanger
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A Toronto police officer mounted a defiant social media campaign against her employer. The police ruled that she had tried to destroy the agency’s reputation.
By Vjosa Isai and Tara Walton
Grizzly Bear 178, or Nakoda, as she was known to her fans on social media, was hit in Yoho National Park, hours after her cubs were struck and killed in a separate accident, officials said.
By Sara Ruberg
Researchers have long assumed that a tube in the famous Pikaia fossil ran along the animal’s back. But a new study turned the fossil upside down.
By Carl Zimmer
American travelers going abroad this summer will find their money buys more in some unexpected countries, including Japan and Australia.
By Elaine Glusac
A report by a parliamentary committee said that politicians, who were not named, had helped China, India and other countries meddle in Canadian politics.
By Ian Austen
A police force outside Toronto said that charges against Frank Stronach, 91, relate to episodes from as long ago as the 1980s and as recent as last year.
By Ian Austen
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