This story appears in the July 2016 issue of National Geographic magazine. In the digital age, when it’s easy to manipulate a photo, it’s harder than ever to ensure that the images we publish ...
Expedition photographer Frank Hurley’s visuals have become timeless classics of their own, ensuring the story lives on a century later.
Will AI always give flawed answers? Can we prevent AI from compounding problems from our past? Four experts weigh in.
Joel Sartore is trying to capture photos of as many species as he can before they disappear. That’s the mission of the ...
National Geographic is a top choice for anyone interested in environmentally friendly travel. This magazine not only offers ...
These antiheroes of the American West are actually not so bad. New research reveals they're good parents and neighbors, and ...
Brisket, burnt ends and an anything-goes spirit define barbecue culture in KC, a Midwestern US city with a voracious appetite ...
Abandoned at an airport in China, then adopted by a photographer, Piggy the piglet grew up in front of the camera—and changed everything for his new family.
This writer traced her roots back to a small Calabrian village and found 100 living relatives. A new Italian initiative makes ...
The number of Black campers in America has doubled in less than a decade, with some community groups teaming up to share ...
National Geo's Washington DC museum plans to place visitors inside the stories and inspire a new generation of explorers ...
In 1933, two eye-witness claimed to have seen a prehistoric-like animal in the waters of a Scottish lake. In the following years, the truth would begin to unravel as more people claimed to spot this ...