Read the inside story of the discovery of Endurance, including reactions from the lead researchers and Horvaths photos from the farthest reaches of the Southern Ocean. As Nowruz approaches, its not too late to learn more about Irans long history of poets going back to more than 10 centuries. This other island has been declaredrat-freethanks to a conservation effort. pic.twitter.com/VOt6KydD5Z, Today is my last day at National Geographic. L, National Geographic turns 135 in 2023. There was a lot to celebrate about the work over the last two and a half years, and, despite losing my job, I felt grateful to have friends and colleagues who were willing to be a part of this weird concept of a party. Go tonatgeo.com/exploremoreto subscribe today. Learn about how cadaver dogs are used a, Playback: The Battle for the Soul of Artificial Intelligence, With every breakthrough, computer scientists are pushing the boundaries of artificial intelligence (AI). Want more? Now shes teaching her community how to be good neighbors to humans closest genetic relativeand potentially save them from extinction. Learn more about your ad choices. Now, a new generation of scientists is carrying his work forward. But the hard work is far from over, as Sala aims to protect 30 percent of the worlds oceans by 2030. Hosted by Peter Gwin and Amy Briggs. In her work on the Yukon Quest dog sled race, you can see what it looks like to cross 1,000 miles of Alaska on dog power. Information and tickets can be found on the museum website. If elected president, could Ron DeSantis end birthright citizenship? You can learn more about her adventures on her blog, The Catch Me If You Can, and Instagram page. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices, She Sails the Seas Without Maps or Compasses, For nearly 50 years, a group of Hawaiians have been sailing on traditional voyaging canoes using the methods that early Polynesian explorers relied on to navigate the Pacific Oceanwithout maps and modern instruments, and relying on the stars, ocean waves, birds, and other natural elements to guide them. Take in the breathtaking sight of hundreds of beluga whales gathering in the Arctic. If you want more on Gibbss journey and his research, check out our story about him online. Less than one percent of genome studies include Indigenous people. And you can follow him on Instagram @christianscottofficial. But a series of attacks at the Jersey shore in 1916 would forever change the way we tell stories about sharks. That morning, I was walking my usual commute to National Geographic headquarters. Why did people abandon Cahokia? See Yagazie Emezis photosand other scenes from a world with 8 billion peoplein the April issue of National Geographic. Overheard at National Geographic. Go belowground with National Geographic Explorer Tamara Merino to see how these communities have been livingquite comfortablyfor a very long time. Now meet the other Kari. This is just one of many celebrations planned for this milestone anniversary. Read Craig Welchs reporting on the changing Arctic, including how the thawing of permafrost affects us all. Plus, learn more about how the COVID-19 pandemic had a big effect on Armenians and Azerbaijanis already struggling with the conflict. For Peter Gwins reporting on snow leopards in Kibber, National Geographic magazine subscribers can read his piece, Himalaya Snow Leopards Are Finally Coming Into View. National Geographic gone woke?! Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices. And learn all about the trillions of microbes that live inside us! We talk to journalist Nikole Hannah-Jones about how politics affected The 1619 Project and what it means to be in the middle of this social reckoning. Did you know that chimpanzees hunt tortoises? If you like what you hear and want to support more content like this, please consider a National Geographic subscription. Learn more about theKingdom of Kushin what is now Sudan, a rival to ancient Egypt awash in gold and power. Learn more about Eyal Weintraub by following him on Instagram @eyalwein and follow Jordan Salama @JordanSalama19. Guttenfelder is also one of the few Westerners who has spent an extensive amount o, Can You Picture That? For more information on this episode, visit natgeo.com/overheard. Can You Hear the Reggae in My Photographs? Rats have adapted over the millennia to survive and thrive in human company, much to our amazement and (often) disgust. But increasingly machines show many of the same biases as humans, particularly with communities of color and vulnerable populations. Read more about that here. Also Explore: You'll be introduced to the explorers, photographers and scientists at the edges of our big, bizarre, and beautiful world. Learn how Guillermo de Andauses ground-penetrating radarand other high-tech tools to investigate Chichen Itza. It wasnt easy. Go tonatg, Smuggled dinosaur bones. Meet one of the climbers in the Full Circle Everest expedition, and learn why he hopes this historic accomplishment shows that Black people belong in outdoor recreation too. Its now the Amelia Earhart Museum. See more of Laurent Ballestas photographs, including an image he took of a grouper mating frenzy that recently won him the Wildlife Photographer of the Year award from the London Natural History Museum. Learn more about the people in this episode, including editor in chief Nathan Lump, National Geographic Society CEO Jill Tiefenthaler, and senior graphics editor Fernando Baptista. Read about the zombie parasites that control their hosts, and watch a video of these mindsuckers here. Hosted by Peter Gwin and Amy Briggs. Learn more aboutPuerto Alegria- a Peruvian town on the banks of the Amazon that was once a hotbed of wild, Half a mile below the surface of the earth, in a cave too hot to explore without an ice-packed suit, NASA scientist and Nat Geo explorer Penny Boston clambers around glassy crystals that are taller than telephone poles and wider than dinner tables. Find out what that means for the future of space tourism. Go to natg, The Woman Who Knows What Elephants Are Saying, For almost 50 years, National Geographic Explorer Joyce Poole has been carefully watching the elephants of Kenyas Amboseli National Park. Editor-at-Large Peter Gwin was among them, and he and Amy Briggs, Executive Editor of National Geographic History, talk about how this day fits in with inaugurations of the past. But as climate change continues to exacerbate wildfire seasons and a growing body of scientific research supports using fire to fight fire, Indigenous groups in the Klamath Basin are reviving cultural burning practices that effectively controlled forest fires for centuries. Full-sized ca, San Diego is home to the worlds first frozen zooa genetic library where scientists are racing to bank the tissues and stem cells of disappearing animals. Also explore National Geographic editor Rachael Bale shares what she saw at the trial of a notorious cheetah smuggler and explores how Somaliland is battling the illegal cheetah trade. To learn more about this story and writer Cynthia Gorneys other reporting on the science of touch, take a look at her feature article. Learn more about your ad choices. For more bat info, follow Rodrigo on Instagram @batmanmedellin.Learn more about your ad choices. There are drunken trees in forests across Alaska, Canada and northern Eurasia. For more information on this episode, visit natgeo.com/overheard. Want more? Want More? To learn more about David OConnors conservation work, check out his organization, Save Giraffes Now. All rights reserved, Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices, A Mexican Wolf Pups Journey into the Wild, For centuries, Mexican gray wolves roamed the Southwest. podcast were in large part why she came to National Geographic. Like Gilgamesh, Chris Hemsworth is on a mission to live better for longer. For more information on this episode, visitnationalgeographic.com/overheard Want more? Our guest this week is two-time Grammy award winner Rhiannon Giddens, a singer, songwriter, and banjo and fiddle player. Here's a straightforward explainer of how it all started. The International Dark Sky Association is working to protect our skies from light pollution. Want more? Hosted by Overheard producer Khari Douglas, these four episodes (every Tuesday in February) will feature world-famous musicians Rhiannon Giddens, Sampa the Great, Chief Xian aTunde Adjuah (formerly Christian Scott), and Meklit Hadero (also a Nat Geo explorer) in conversation with Nat Geo Explorers Alyea Pierce, Danielle Lee, Justin Dunnavant, and Jahawi Bertolli. Meet them in our article. Learn why. This is a different Amelia, which might explain why the mystery of her disappearance remains unsolvedexplorers are looking in the wrong place. Take a look at Nilssons recreation of him. Believe it or not, manta rays have their own distinct social circles. It was a silly hypothetical at first. In th, Social Media is not just for modern folk. See some more of the photos shes taken around the world at katieorlinskyphoto.com. Learn more about how periodical cicadas do it. Thats because getting there is no small feat. Learn more abouthoneybees. For more on the restoration of the Notre Dame de Paris, read National Geographics magazine story, which features Tomas van Houtryves photography and drone videos. The attacks on the Jersey Shore in 1916 were captured in the newspapers at the time; the fear generated was instantaneous. New research rules out a theory that environmental degradation led to its demise, In the heart of the Serengeti, hippos bathe and hyenas snatch food from hungry lions. College sports have radically evolved during that timetake the high-tech clothes that emit infrared radiation to maximize performancebut theres one constant: Title IX of the Higher Education Act ensures that no person is excluded from university programs on the basis of sex. In collaboration with ESPN and The Walt Disney Company, we examine how Title IX continues to ripple across American society. National Geographic photographer Ami Vitale has covered conflict and nature. Michael Greshko has a lot more to say about Spinosaurus. Charlies also photographed the urban animals that live alongside us: rats. National Geographic Explorer Topher Whitewho considers himself a war photographer for climate changehas found that by listening for the sounds of logging through hundreds of recycled cell phones nailed high in treetops from Indonesia to Eastern Europe, the stewards of the world's trees might have a chance to detect and prevent illegal logging. It has been hit by a series of layoffs. We'll be in your inbox every morning Monday-Saturday with all the days top business news, inspiring stories, best advice and exclusive reporting from Entrepreneur. Want more? Its a question weve been asking for millennia. Whether theyre right or wrong, one thing remains true: Their stories have little to do with Amelia herself. Want more? But its also part of Yemen, a country enduring a horrific civil war. And download a tool kit for hosting an Into the Depths listening party to spark conversation and journey deeper into the material. The other is a book for kids, and it goes through the ABCs, with poetry by Debbie Levy. "National Geographic will continue to publish a monthly magazine that is dedicated to exceptional multi-platform storytelling with cultural impact," spokesman Chris Albert said. Read Craigs story, and see pictures of the journey and the worlds southernmost tree. Space isnt the only place to explore when scientists are looking for alien life; its also important to go undergroundhere on Earth. For more information on this episode, visit natgeo.com/overheard. Read My Flight from Hawaii, the 1935 article Earhart wrote for National Geographic about her voyage from Hawaii to California. When an explorer uncovered the skeleton of an ancient Peruvian queen in a tomb in Peru, they asked Nilsson to make a recreation of her. See how we summed up 2021 in the Year in Pictures. It hits newsstands December 15. The result? For more information on this episode, visit nationalgeographic.com/overheard But it's a sad day for journalism pic.twitter.com/vzBDJwDJxM. She's the author of several books, including some of the National Geographic Angry Birds series. Want more? Overheard She sails the seas. We didnt do this at my party, but a lot of people asked if I had a registry. For more information on this episode, visit natgeo.com/overheard. Send a spacecraft equipped with something akin to a Roomba at the end of a 10-foot pogo stick. Want more? How did the Holocaustwhich murdered six million Jews and stripped millions more of their livelihoods, their families, and even their nameshappen in plain sight? Gils commitment to env, In a collaboration with National Geographic television, we follow 29-year-old adventurer and filmmaker Bertie Gregory on a nail-biting journey to some of the harshest, most spectacular corners of the world. Do you lie more or less than the average person? The company would not discuss how many people lost their jobs. Follow National Geographic Explorer Matt Kasson as he tracks these flying saltshakers of death, and hear why scientists say cicadas should be respected, not fearedeven if they do raise a ruckus in your backyard. To see Kiliiis stunning photography and short film about the Inupiaq people and their whale hunting traditions, Nat Geo subscribers can check them out in an online story, titled Meet the Bowhead Whale Hunters of Northern Alaska. Also explore: Go tonatgeo.com/exploremoreto subscribe today. The project is audaciousand worth following closely. Learn more about your ad choices. Did you know that some pieces of Stonehenge may have come from even older artifacts? Read the story of Kossola, who later received the name Cudjo Lewis, in the book Barracoon: The Story of the Last Black Cargo, by author and anthropologist Zora Neale Hurston.Learn more about the life of abolitionist Harriet Jacobs, author of Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, who escaped Edenton, N.C., through the Maritime Underground Railroad.Learn more about your ad choices. Wondering why Malia Byrtus was out dealing with alligators? There are plenty of pirate myths, but National Geographic has the true stories of discovering Blackbeards ship,, In the most remote part of Guyana, plateaus called tepuisalso known as sky islands for poking through the cloudsrise up from the jungle. Or you can also listen to her podcast, Going Wild with Dr. Rae Wynn-Grant, where you can hear her interview fellow conservationists, Playback: The Real-Life MacGyver in Nat Geo's Basement, In the basement of National Geographics headquarters, theres a lab holding a secret tech weapon: Tom OBrien. Learn more about your ad choices. Subscribers can also see what the giraft looked like and read more about the giraffe rescue from Lake Baringo. Why do some people prefer LGBTQIA+ instead of LGBT? All rights reserved. But in January 2021, a group of Nepali climbers attempted to accomplish what people thought was impossible. Badly damaged by fire in 2019, Notre-Dame is again in the hands of skilled artisans who are braving dizzying heights and dangerous conditions to bring the cathedral back to life. Check out more of Guillermo's work through theGreat Maya Aquifer Project. Later, I talked with my roommate, a video producer who also works at Nat Geo but was not laid off, and unpacked what had happened with my team. It was treasured for decades. In 2021, a Mexican wolf named Mr. Goodbar crossed the border from Mexico into the United States, raising questions about how the border wall will affect animal migration. And take a look at our in-depth coverage on the challenges facing polar bears in the Arctic. Technology is zooming in on the pint-size stuffasteroids, comets, meteors, and other chunks of space rockthat couldnt be studied before, and Lucy, a spacecraft designed to visit eight asteroids near Jupiter, is poised to learn how the secrets inside these small bodies are reshaping ideas about the big old solar system. For more information on this episode visit nationalgeographic.com/overheard Also explore: National Geographics editor at large Peter Gwin travels to the Himalaya to join photographer and National Geographic explorer Prasenjeet Yadav on his search for snow leopards, one of the planets most elusive animals in one of its most forbidding landscapes. But I also needed to be reminded that the work I did wasnt for nothing, that the work my team produced actually mattered and still matters to people. Also explore: Guest host Jordan Salama joins Weintraub to talk about his popular podcast, Lo Que Haces Cuenta, which unpacks the climate crisis in bite-sized episodesand explores the everyday ways people can fight it. Want more? Check out Gil Grosvenors new memoir, A Man of the World: My Life at National Geographic. Sperm whalesin the Caribbean form clans that have their own unique dialects-and thus culture. Mariana and Jennings discuss the day he got busted, his life leading up to it, and the toll it took. Also explore: Learn howillegal tomb raidersare stealing the world's history. Although a large group of LGBTQ people celebrating their sexual orientation in public had been unthinkable just a few years before, the first Pride parades began in 1970 as marchescommemorating the 1969 Stonewall uprising. Butit was very much a living cityright up until it was snuffed out by Mt. And read a Bloomberg article that goes into detail about what happened at Se, The U.S. is home to some of the most beautiful, incomparable places on the planet, from the pristine Shi Shi Beach at the Makah Reservation in Washington State to the Couturie Forest in New Orleans. Learn about the Makahs efforts to resume their practice of hunting gray whales, which was banned in the mid-1900s, in this article by Emma Marris. Want More? But some experts suggest lying at a young age could be a welcome sign of childhood development. Follow Taras journey around the world on Instagram. For a previous National Geographic assignment, Yagazie photographed the women stepping up to remake Rwanda. Also explore: Dive deeper with two other Overheard episodes about the ocean: Go t, The United States v. One Tyrannosaurus Bataar, When a Mongolian paleontologist sees a dinosaur skeleton illegally up for auction in the United States, she goes to great lengths to stop the sale. Also explore: But climate change and human activity is threatening this charismatic reptile.Learn more about your ad choices. Salas explorations have led to 24 marine preserveswith a combined area more than twice the size of India. Well fold cranes with National Geographic writer Maya Wei-Haas, who will share the latest advancements with origami and what the future holds for this art form in science. Also explore: Hosted by Peter Gwin and Amy Briggs. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices, When Nat Geo Explorer Gibbs Kuguru was in college, he found himself trying to choose between two terrifying futures: going free diving with sharks off the coast of South Africa or, even scarier, studying for the MCAT. For more information on this episode, visit nationalgeographic.com/overheard. The answer depends on who you ask. National Geographic, the iconic yellow framed magazine that has chronicled the natural world for more than 100 years, laid off its last remaining staff writers this week, multiple departing . For more information on this episode, visit nationalgeographic.com/overheard. No wonder scientists want to explore Socotra. But solving this mystery led to a bigger question: what if it happens again? Find her on Twitter at @EmilyKRella. The reticulated python is the longest snake species in the world. For more information on this episode, visit natgeo.com/overheard. Want more? This episode features some strong language and drug references, so if your kids are around, you might want to check out another one of our episodes. Come dive into one of the curiously delightful conversations overheard at National Geographic's headquarters, as we follow explorers, photographers, and scientists to the edges of our big, weird, beautiful world. But climate change and human activity is threatening this charismatic reptile. Want more? Searching for wrecks of lost slave ships. Why do some people prefer LGBTQIA+ instead of LGBT? Want More? Hear Nat Geo Explorer Keolu Fox on a previous Overheard episode share how hes working with Polynesian and Indigenous communities to study how their genomes have been shaped by history and colonialism, and how that data can help them reclaim land and improve health outcomes for their communities.
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