An investigation found that the part behind an F-16C crash was in a "blind spot" that Air Force mechanics can't see during ...
Wildlife around Holloman Lake have tested positive for high levels of PFAS, prompting health concerns for hunters.
Environmental regulators and health officials in New Mexico are warning hunters that harmful chemicals known to cause cancer ...
A public health alert issued by the New Mexico Department of Health on Jan. 27 urged anyone who consumed wildlife from ...
State officials issued a health advisory for Holloman Lake hunters after a report showed record-high levels of forever ...
In the case of Holloman Lake, the chemicals were believed to have originated from firefighting foam used at Holloman Air Force Base near Alamogordo from the 1970s until 2016, when the Air Force ceased ...
Flora and fauna surrounding Holloman Lake contain the highest levels of a toxic chemical that can cause cancer and other health issues — known as PFAS — ever documented, according to a recent report ...
In New Mexico, the concern centers on a lake that serves as the wastewater reservoir for Holloman Air Force Base. It sits at the edge of the base and near White Sands National Park. While hunting ...
The land was acquired by Holloman Air Force Base in 1996 as a wastewater evaporation pond, wrote spokesperson Denise Ottaviano in an email to The New Mexican. The Defense Authorization Act of 1996 ...
In New Mexico, the concern centers on a lake that serves as the wastewater reservoir for Holloman Air Force Base. It sits at the edge of the base and near White Sands National Park. While hunting ...