This story appears in the November 2010 issue of National Geographic magazine. Animal migration is a phenomenon ... crossed this moist gulch full of goldenrod and skunkbrush (we thrashed through ...
Nicknamed the Ginsu shark after the kitchen knife that slices and dices, Cretoxyrhina ripped apart prey with a mouth full of razor-sharp, bone-shearing teeth. Evidence suggests Cretoxyrhina fed on ...
This edition of Bonza highlights themes like Animals, Travel, Planet Earth, Humanity and Science. Based on the popular National Geographic Channel TV show by the same name, Doomsday Preppers ...
This story appears in the August 2016 issue of National Geographic magazine ... down low in the grass to get a closer look at the animal lurching toward me. She’s about four months old, the ...
We recently sat down with the doctor in advance of his 100th episode (airing in March 2017) to hear what he’s learned about animals and the people who live and work with them—and to learn what ...
Editor’s Note: This story accompanies the May 2016 issue of National Geographic magazine ... and the University of Wyoming, studies animal pathways. And Greater Yellowstone, the 22.6-million ...
This story appears in the September 2016 issue of National Geographic magazine ... “The idea was never to get full vision,” he says, “but to improve a patient’s ability to recognize ...
A medical assistant in her late 20s, she has dark brown eyes, full eyebrows ... questions (What is the color of grass? What is an animal that barks?), the camera records minute changes in the ...
This story appears in the June 2016 issue of National Geographic ... in its full glory”—that’s how U.S. ecologist Kent Redford describes the enormous variety of animals and plants that ...
even National Geographic—served as gatekeepers of scientific information. The Internet has democratized information, which is a good thing. But along with cable TV, it has made it possible to ...
How did your obsession for animals transform ... the Galápagos. National Geographic for Disney+/Bertie Gregory Manske: Complex efforts go into planning and execution of each episode.
Photograph by Monty Brinton, CBS via Getty Images NT: Might there ever be room in your show for a female character who’s more sexualized—but also a full-on scientist? MB: We did an episode ...