Measuring over 30sq.km with an average depth of 10.9m, Twofold Bay is the third deepest natural harbour in the Southern Hemisphere, after Sydney Harbour and South Africa’s Saldanha Bay. But it’s the ...
Uluṟu-Kata Tjuṯa National Park was returned to its Traditional Owners 40 years ago.
Current strategies prioritise three species of cultural and ecological importance: the djabbo (northern quoll), djebuyh ...
Violet Hensley, a noted fiddle maker and musician known as the “Whittling Fiddler” and as the “Stradivarius of the Ozarks,” ...
From historic Everest summits to Jane Goodall’s chimpanzee research, National Geographic magazine and its famed covers have ...
Formed more than 500 million years ago, this land—home to the oldest living culture in the world—tells an ancient story.
Oftentimes referred to as the “king of the jungle,” lions are highly social and intelligent creatures. These big cats are also critical to maintaining the health of their ecosystem. National ...
Scientists say that the fires ravaging the western United States are burning differently these days. Documenting the aftermath requires a new approach as well. In a conventional photograph of ...
WASHINGTON, DC — Californian Priya Talreja, a Fremont native has been named one of just five researchers nationwide to receive the highly coveted 2025 Fulbright-National Geographic Award. The $20,000 ...
One famous snail’s death highlights the plight faced by diverse Hawaiian snails, of which there were once hundreds of species ...
The Rise of Adult ADHD is a National Geographic exploration of new research that is upending old notions about who the condition affects—and how those diagnosed with it can thrive. Millions of ...
During her hunt for the Egyptian queen’s lost tomb, National Geographic Explorer Kathleen Martínez uncovered the sunken landscape near the ruins of Taposiris Magna. Archeologist Kathleen Martínez and ...
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