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National Geographic Magazine

Aug 01 2023
Magazine

Amazing discoveries and experiences await you in every issue of National Geographic magazine. The latest news in science, exploration, and culture will open your eyes to the world’s many wonders.

FROM THE EDITOR

CONTRIBUTORS

NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC EXPLORERS • These contributors have received funding from the National Geographic Society, which is committed to illuminating and protecting the wonder of our world.

THE LIFE AQUATIC • Extreme close-ups reveal details of the normally unseen but eye-popping organisms that occupy single droplets of seawater.

THE BACKSTORY • THIS PHOTOGRAPHER IS ON A QUEST TO DOCUMENT TINY CREATURES IN THE SEA, ONE DROP OF WATER AT A TIME.

How a Discovery Is (Dis)proved • A SCIENTIST OBSERVED ONE STARTLING CELESTIAL EVENT—AND THEN NO MORE, FOR YEARS. WAS IT A BREAKTHROUGH OR A FLUKE?

THE PERYTON EXPLANATION

GETTING SHEEPSHAPE

Desert X AlUla: The Art of the Desert • AlUla’s oasis has inspired artists for millennia: Recently, Desert X AlUla has brought a fresh artistic resurgence to this striking desert landscape.

AI, learning the slopes

UNDER THE MOONLIGHT • WHILE MANY SPECIES CAN BE FOUND RELAXING IN SUNSHINE, TURTLES TAKE BASKING INTO OVERTIME.

Retina may help assess Alzheimer’s

COLORECTAL CANCER UP AMONG YOUNGER ADULTS

ADAMS CASSINGA • He fights for wildlife in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

THE FERTILE FOSSIL • For two decades, a single fossil has revolutionized paleontologists’ understanding of dinosaur skin. And it may yield still more surprises.

FEATURES

NO WAY OUT • A National Geographic team set out to retrace the doomed voyage of 19th-century explorer Sir John Franklin and search for clues to his disappearance in the fabled Northwest Passage. But the Arctic doesn’t give up its secrets easily.

A MYSTERY LOCKED IN ICE

THE GOLDEN AGE OF MUMMIFICATION • Excavations of an ancient mortuary complex in Egypt are shedding light on how the craft was once a booming business—and not just for pharaohs.

THE PAST IS PRESENT • NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC PARTNERED WITH THE FOR FREEDOMS ARTIST GROUP ON A SERIES OF PHOTO ESSAYS INSPIRED BY AMERICAN HISTORY.

A KIND OF FREEDOM • The American story of Black equestrians

WE HELPED BUILD THIS COUNTRY • Uncovering the history of Chinese railroad workers

THE WORLD’S OLDEST COLONY • Crisis, struggle, and strength in Puerto Rico

UNLIKELY REFUGEES • At a sanctuary in Jordan, wild animals that survived war zones, injuries, and smugglers find respite.

A LASTING SAFE HAVEN

GRETCHEN KAY STUART • FROM OUR PHOTOGRAPHERS


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Frequency: Monthly Pages: 140 Publisher: National Geographic Society Edition: Aug 01 2023

OverDrive Magazine

  • Release date: July 25, 2023

Formats

OverDrive Magazine

subjects

Science

Languages

English

Amazing discoveries and experiences await you in every issue of National Geographic magazine. The latest news in science, exploration, and culture will open your eyes to the world’s many wonders.

FROM THE EDITOR

CONTRIBUTORS

NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC EXPLORERS • These contributors have received funding from the National Geographic Society, which is committed to illuminating and protecting the wonder of our world.

THE LIFE AQUATIC • Extreme close-ups reveal details of the normally unseen but eye-popping organisms that occupy single droplets of seawater.

THE BACKSTORY • THIS PHOTOGRAPHER IS ON A QUEST TO DOCUMENT TINY CREATURES IN THE SEA, ONE DROP OF WATER AT A TIME.

How a Discovery Is (Dis)proved • A SCIENTIST OBSERVED ONE STARTLING CELESTIAL EVENT—AND THEN NO MORE, FOR YEARS. WAS IT A BREAKTHROUGH OR A FLUKE?

THE PERYTON EXPLANATION

GETTING SHEEPSHAPE

Desert X AlUla: The Art of the Desert • AlUla’s oasis has inspired artists for millennia: Recently, Desert X AlUla has brought a fresh artistic resurgence to this striking desert landscape.

AI, learning the slopes

UNDER THE MOONLIGHT • WHILE MANY SPECIES CAN BE FOUND RELAXING IN SUNSHINE, TURTLES TAKE BASKING INTO OVERTIME.

Retina may help assess Alzheimer’s

COLORECTAL CANCER UP AMONG YOUNGER ADULTS

ADAMS CASSINGA • He fights for wildlife in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

THE FERTILE FOSSIL • For two decades, a single fossil has revolutionized paleontologists’ understanding of dinosaur skin. And it may yield still more surprises.

FEATURES

NO WAY OUT • A National Geographic team set out to retrace the doomed voyage of 19th-century explorer Sir John Franklin and search for clues to his disappearance in the fabled Northwest Passage. But the Arctic doesn’t give up its secrets easily.

A MYSTERY LOCKED IN ICE

THE GOLDEN AGE OF MUMMIFICATION • Excavations of an ancient mortuary complex in Egypt are shedding light on how the craft was once a booming business—and not just for pharaohs.

THE PAST IS PRESENT • NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC PARTNERED WITH THE FOR FREEDOMS ARTIST GROUP ON A SERIES OF PHOTO ESSAYS INSPIRED BY AMERICAN HISTORY.

A KIND OF FREEDOM • The American story of Black equestrians

WE HELPED BUILD THIS COUNTRY • Uncovering the history of Chinese railroad workers

THE WORLD’S OLDEST COLONY • Crisis, struggle, and strength in Puerto Rico

UNLIKELY REFUGEES • At a sanctuary in Jordan, wild animals that survived war zones, injuries, and smugglers find respite.

A LASTING SAFE HAVEN

GRETCHEN KAY STUART • FROM OUR PHOTOGRAPHERS


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