Seaweed bathing in Ireland, a trek through Africa’s first designated wilderness quiet park—we asked National Geographic staff ...
The breakthrough is often credited to Scottish inventor John Logie Baird—but the real history is far more complicated and ...
Earth is covered with technofossils, or man-made materials, that will last for centuries and maybe even longer.
About 700 million years ago, Earth was entombed in a veneer of ice hundreds of feet thick—a frozen state scientists refer to as “Snowball Earth.” Oceans cooled but managed to retain some heat to avoid ...
Massi rushes down the slope, leaps across a slow-running stream and disappears inside a thick bush. Rosie, his young offspring, follows. Massi pauses, narrows down on a spot, and starts digging. Luke ...
Mating calls and rituals can be intercepted, or drowned out, by invasive species. Scientists are just starting to understand ...
The world-famous parks and reserves of Kenya and Tanzania offer some of the planet’s most awe-inspiring wildlife encounters.
The Finnish city’s main draw is unquestionably its credentials as the official home of Santa Claus, but look beyond the ...
In Churchill, Canada, polar bears gather by the hundreds in the fall, waiting for the nearby bay to freeze. The human ...
Scattered across coral-strewn reefs and sunken cliffs, Bermuda’s centuries-old shipwrecks beckon explorers to uncover ...
Dark matter is a mysterious substance that glues galaxies together. This map from the James Webb Space Telescope could help ...
From Yosemite’s Badger Pass to little-known slopes in Washington State and Ohio, three parks offer a rare chance to ski ...
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