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Michael Williams scans the shoreline for moose while traveling up the Yukon River on Tuesday, Sept. 14, 2021, near Stevens Village, Alaska. For the first time in memory, both king and chum salmon have dwindled to almost nothing and the state has banned salmon fishing on the Yukon. The remote communities that dot the river and live off its bounty are desperate and doubling down on moose and caribou hunts in the waning days of fall. (AP Photo/Nathan Howard)

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AP reveals Alaska tribes in crisis as salmon runs disappear

OCT. 8, 2021

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A young girl holds her stuffed animal overhead as migrants, many from Haiti, wade across the Rio Grande river from Del Rio, Texas, returning to Ciudad Acuña, Mexico, to avoid deportation, Sept. 20, 2021. The U.S. was flying Haitians camped in the Texas border town back to their homeland and blocking others from crossing the border from Mexico. (AP Photo / Félix Márquez)

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Across formats, across countries: AP dominates coverage of border migrant encampment

OCT. 1, 2021

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In this July 2021 photo provided by the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society., A Chinese-flagged ship fishes for squid at night on the high seas off the west coast of South America July 2021 photo provided by the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society. Since 2009 the number of Chinese-flagged vessels in the southern Pacific surged 10-fold to 557 in 2020, according to an intergovernmental group charged with ensuring conservation and sustainable fishing. (Isaac Haslam / Sea Shepherd via AP)

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AP and Univision team up on investigation of China’s distant water fishing fleet

OCT. 1, 2021

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RETRANSMITTED FOR IMPROVED TONING AND ALTERNATE CROP. Four days after the 9/11 attacks, smoke from ground zero drifts past the Statue of Liberty at first light, seen from Jersey City, N.J., Sept. 15, 2001. Statue of Liberty is seen at first light in this view from Jersey City, N.J., against a smoke-filled backdrop of the lower Manhattan skyline, early Saturday, Sept. 15, 2001. (AP Photo / Dan Loh)

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20th anniversary coverage of 9/11 touches all corners of AP

SEPT. 17, 2021

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Farmer Tim Black loads grass seed before sowing the seed on his fields in Muleshoe, Texas, April 19, 2021. The longtime corn farmer now raises cattle, and plants some of his pasture in wheat and native grasses because the Ogallala aquifer, needed to irrigate crops, is drying up. (AP Photo / Mark Rogers)

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AP: Texas farmers race to preserve land in Dust Bowl zone

SEPT. 17, 2021

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In Beit Hanoun, northern Gaza Strip, June 11, 2021, Mahmoud Nassir, 10, looks out from his home, heavily damaged by airstrikes during May’s 11-day war between Hamas and Israel. Members of the Nassir family and their neighbors have endured four wars in 13 years. A United Nations inspector said the building will have to come down, but even with the expectation that conflict will erupt again, the family plans to rebuild. (AP Photo / Felipe Dana)

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Only on AP: Rich multiformat project tells the intimate story of Gaza family and the toll of four wars

SEPT. 3, 2021

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Whitney Anderson wheels a recently purchased air scrubber through a classroom in advance of the school year at the E.N. White School in Holyoke, Mass., Aug. 4, 2021. Schools across the U.S. are about to start a new year amid a flood of federal money larger than they’ve ever seen before, an infusion of pandemic relief aid that is four times the amount the U.S. Department of Education sends to K-12 schools in a typical year. (AP Photo / Charles Krupa)

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US didn’t track more than $150B in pandemic school aid. AP did.

SEPT. 3, 2021

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Michael Williams sits for an interview in his South Side Chicago home, July 27, 2021, after spending nearly a year in jail as a suspect in a May 2020 killing. Prosecutors had used ShotsSpotter evidence to build their case against Williams. “I kept trying to figure out, how can they get away with using the technology like that against me?” he asked. “That’s not fair.” His case was eventually dismissed when prosecutors said they had insufficient evidence. (AP Photo / Charles Rex Arbogast)

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AP investigation finds gunshot detection technology has helped send innocent people to jail

AUG. 27, 2021

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People walk on the street, Monday, April 26, 2021 in New York. The once-a-decade head count of the United States shows where the population grew during the past 10 years and where it shrank. New York will lose one seat in Congress as a result of national population shifts, according to census data released Monday. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

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Expert analysis and 50-state effort put census data in perspective

AUG. 20, 2021

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During an interview at her home in Antelias, Lebanon, July 12, 2021, Chouchan Yeghiyan weeps in front of a picture of her daughter, nurse Jessica Bezdjian, who was killed in last year’s massive blast at Beirut’s seaport. Bezidjian was one of four female nurses who died at the Saint George Hospital University Medical Center that day, including a close friend who was killed instantly. (AP Photo / Bilal Hussein)

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Character-driven coverage reveals unhealed wounds of Beirut blast

AUG. 13, 2021

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Ashley Williams Watt walks near a wellhead and flowline at her ranch, Friday, July 9, 2021, near Crane, Texas. The wells on Watt's property seem to be unplugging themselves. Some are leaking dangerous chemicals into the ground, which are seeping into her cattle's drinking water. And she doesn't know how long it's been going on. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)

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AP reveals threat of abandoned, leaking oil and gas wells in US

AUG. 6, 2021

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Dr. Paulette Dillard, President of Shaw University, a private Black university, poses on campus in Raleigh, N.C., July 12, 2021. “While larger HBCUs often have the funding resources necessary to attract accomplished talent like Nikole Hannah-Jones and Ta-Nehisi Coates, many smaller institutions need donors to step forward, contributing much-needed financial resources for us to compete,” said Dr. Dillard. The school has lost more than half its enrollment over the past decade and did not benefit from the private fundraising for Black colleges that grew out of the 2020 racial justice protests. (AP Photo / Gerry Broome)

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AP analysis: Wealth, enrollment disparities threaten smaller Black colleges

JULY 23, 2021

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