New York is the most walkable city in the country. Here’s how to plan your trek across its most famous island—including what ...
Some harlequin frogs have lost their poison—and their ability to defend themselves. Scientists are on the case.
They may look like spiders, but daddy longlegs belong to a different group of arachnids entirely. Here's why they're more ...
Whether you’re cracking crayfish at a Swedish summer party, foraging in Alpine meadows or plucking grapes in a Portuguese ...
National Geographic’s latest travel stories about Norway ...
Anyone can learn to sand yacht, all you need is a decent gust — and a good set of waterproofs. Sand yachting is one sport ...
A Russian photographer explores her ancestral ties to a tiny town that has been isolated for centuries—and wants to stay that ...
In new footage from National Geographic’s cameras on board the NASA mission, Reid Wiseman and Jeremy Hansen talk about naming ...
The millions of people who inhabited colonial America left traces of their lives behind—from George Washington’s bed to a ...
Banteay Samre is just one of more than a thousand shrines the Khmer erected in the city of Angkor during a building spree ...
Once endorsed by a sultan, Turkish delight has been a sweet treat for centuries; now it’s taking on new forms in Istanbul, ...
Of the roughly 18,000 new species discovered each year, a few have a certain star quality. In 2008, when an orange-haired, ...
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