Pangolins are believed to be the most trafficked mammals in the world. As the four Asian species of pangolins have dwindled, poachers are increasingly turning to the African species to supply the trade.
Asteroids are incredible sources of information about the history of our solar system. Planetary geologist and National Geographic Explorer Bethany Ehlmann studies gambar of Ceres, the largest asteroid in the sabuk between Mars and Jupiter.
In the first of National Geographic’s “Into Water” 360 series, travel oleh air, perahu and jeep through the rugged Icelandic countryside with geographer and glaciologist Dr. M Jackson.
COSMOS: POSSIBLE WORLDS premieres March 9 on National Geographic. This out-of-this-world trip through luar angkasa and time will transport viewers across 13.8 billion years of cosmic evolution and deep into the future.
Stunning drone footage captures Chasm 1, a huge crack on the Brunt Ice Shelf. When it inevitably intersects with the nearby halloween Crack, an iceberg the size of Houston, Texas will break off into the ocean.
Everest, the world’s highest mountain, has been an elite climbing destination for decades. But rising tourism in the Sagarmatha National Park, has made trash and plastics management a challenge.
In Porto Velho, capital of a Brazilian state ravaged oleh baru saja fires, residents are on edge and falling ill from the pervasive smoke. A hymn describes the city's sky as forever blue, but now it's grey with smoke.
Could the future of farming rely on pooping fish? Considered to be a sustainable alternative to traditional farming, aquaponics is changing the way we grow food.
The populations of African penguins, a species of penguins found along the coasts of South Africa and Namibia, are declining largely due to the depletion of ikan stocks in the sea, and habitat encroachment.