Its latest project is based on the new Toyota Land Cruiser 250, sold as the Toyota Prado in some markets. Dubbed the AT37 – a ...
Lexus has announced a new off-road-focused grade for its flagship LX 4WD. The 2025 Lexus LX Overtrail borrows the variant name debuted on its smaller, Toyota LandCruiser Prado-based sibling, the GX.
The AT37 name stands for Arctic Trucks and the standard tire size that these monsters will wear when they leave the company's ...
Icelandic four-by-four specialist Arctic Trucks has finally revealed its upgrade ... Both the full-size Toyota Land Cruiser and the Lexus LX used to pack a naturally aspirated V8 as the range ...
(iSeeCars) – The popularity of full-size pickup trucks like the Ford F-150, Chevy Silverado 1500 and Ram 1500 has kept them at the top of new vehicle sales charts for decades. But truck buyers ...
Arctic Trucks has unveiled a rugged Land Cruiser known as the AT37. It features a widebody kit, a 1.6-inch lift, and 37-inch BFGoodrich tires. It also has a revised suspension, a relocated rear ...
you’re more than likely familiar with Arctic Trucks. They are the mad minds behind the arctic adventure bright red Toyota Hi-Lux trucks made famous by Top Gear and its trio of hosts. You might ...
A blizzard whips the Danish, Greenlandic and Faroe Islands flags above the Joint Arctic Command headquarters overlooking the harbor of Nuuk, the capital of Greenland. The small military outpost ...
Researchers in a new study published in Nature Climate Change, have measured the flow of carbon in the Arctic-boreal zone (ABZ) — consisting of the treeless tundra, boreal forests, and wetlands in ...
Toyota’s Tundra pickup truck first launched all the way back in 1999 as the brand’s second entry into the full-size pickup market. Since its debut, it has consistently evolved to match the ...
Open water does not affect Alaska’s western and eastern Arctic tundra regions equally, and the results are seen on the ground, Dial said. In this undated file photo provided by the U.S. Fish and ...
A new study suggests regions of the Arctic tundra are now releasing more planet-warming gases than they absorb, upending a millennia-old trend. The study published in academic journal Nature ...