National Geographic photographer Keith Ladzinski focused on the positive when it came to forest fires: the solutions people are working on.
Flip through some of the most compelling National Geographic covers from the last 50 years. See every issue since 1888 cover-to-cover with Nat Geo PLUS, subscribing members’ all-access pass to ...
National Geographic questions what lies ahead for the planet—will it be saved or lost? So far, it’s impossible to predict. Greta wasn't the first to demand climate action. Meet more young ...
World-renowned stories and exclusive content available in both print & digital access. Included with your holiday gift purchase is a free bonus issue.
World-renowned stories and exclusive content available in both print & digital access. With unlimited access to natgeo.com and its digital archives, your opportunities to explore are endless.
This story appears in the August 2018 issue of National Geographic magazine. “You need to have your throat cut out and your decomposing, bug-infested body fed to wild pigs.” An anonymous ...
(Sources: Benny Goller and Doug Altshuler, University of British Columbia, Vancouver) This story appears in the July 2017 issue of National Geographic magazine. In pursuit of the world’s ...
This story appears in the January 2017 issue of National Geographic magazine. Lots of people are talking about Avery Jackson, a nine-year-old girl from Kansas City who is the first transgender ...
This story appears in the December 2013 issue of National Geographic magazine. It’s a warm winter day in southern California, and busloads of tourists are pulling into an overlook above Beverly ...
Bingham's discovery was published in the April 1913 issue of National Geographic magazine, bringing the mountaintop citadel to the world's attention. (The National Geographic Society helped fund ...
This story appears in the September 2013 issue of National Geographic magazine. By the time Hurricane ... There are opportunities to renew our infrastructure. It’s not all bad news.
From financing expeditions in the New World to founding hospitals and schools, these women were incredibly influential—and granted more power than their counterparts back home.