News

San Antonio is considered among the fastest-sinking cities in the United States, according to a geological study.
Arboretum San Antonio unveiled its design plans to transition more than 200 acres of land on the Southeast Side into Texas’ second-largest arboretum.
Dozens of cities are expected to meet or surpass record high temperatures for this time of year as part of a heat wave that ...
The second-largest city in the Lone Star state, San Antonio is located on the southern edge of the mountainous Texas Hill Country. Its streets follow old Spanish trails and 19th-century wagon ...
Texas is bracing for a relentless and potentially historic heat wave this week, with dangerously high temperatures expected ...
A reader asks why Onion Creek is so named. We looked in the American-Statesman archives and asked area experts.
The forecast for Mother's Day weekend is shaping up to be mostly dry in Houston, but if you have to travel, here's what's ...
Federal funding for regional climate centers was halted in April but has since resumed. Here’s how these climate data ...
Shannon Sharpe gives his thoughts on the Giannis Antetokounmpo trade rumors and shuts down the idea that Bucks will give him ...
Your home could be sinking right now, and you probably have no idea. A new study reveals that major American cities are ...
May 15, 1769: Portola, the Rev. Junipero Serra, 11 soldiers, five muleteers and 12 Christian Indians set out with 200 cattle ...