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“By the time I click the shutter, the hardest part of the work has been done.” From documenting the terror of war to British hospitals in the grip of COVID-19, an ...
A spokesperson for the Consumer Healthcare Products Association—an organization that represents the over-the-counter medicine industry—told National Geographic that “it’s important to ...
Camping is something that everyone should experience at one time or another, but it can be involved, so a camping checklist can help you get started. While some campers may opt to rent an RV and ...
Good posture is not just about sitting straight. It can help you feel better, think more clearly, and could prevent nerve compression, poor tolerance of physical activity, and chronic pain. Poor ...
A stone’s throw from Belcher’s cairns at Port Refuge National Historic Site, archaeologists have found artifacts up to 4,000 years old, offering evidence of ancestral Inuit contact with the ...
They supposedly lurk in remote lakes, hide in dense forests, and roam snowy mountains. Yet despite being refuted by science, cryptids—fantastical beasts that probably don’t exist—have awed ...
The National Geographic Society ... The environment for raising kids is “very bad,” says Emmanuel. And yet, he and Nwakaego manage to send them to school and religious classes.
Scientists suspect many species are in decline—but there are still unanswered questions and a lot of hope. Here's when and where you can still spot them. Experts say a "concerning" number of ...
While tourists flock to magnetic destinations like Nice and Cannes, these often overlooked small towns offer art, history, and natural beauty—without the crowds. On the French Riviera, La Turbie ...
Life in many medieval towns revolved around constructing a cathedral, a massive undertaking that took generations of work by everyone from artists and architects to prisoners of war. Work in ...
However, in 2013, the National Institutes of Health launched an antibacterial resistance program to conduct and fund research aimed at testing new drugs and diagnostic tools as well as optimizing ...
Evidence suggests the tools were used by the human relative Paranthropus, which scientists previously believed relied only on its teeth and jaws to eat. Scientists have unearthed more than 300 ...