Throughout our history, the magazine’s storytelling has relied on photographers—and on artists such as Fernando Gomez Baptista.
Laser-mapping technology uncovers extensive ruins in a Honduran jungle rumored to contain a mythic White City.
In 1797 the “petticoat band” showed up to vote for the New Jersey state legislature, but only on a technicality. Their impact sent lawmakers into a scramble to shut them out.
National Geographic Explorer-at-Large Bob Ballard revisits the Iron Bottom Sound—rediscovering vessels, and making new finds.
Indian photographer Prasenjeet Yadav's image of a black tiger from Odisha's Similipal National Park has featured on the cover of National Geographic magazine's upcoming October 2025 edition.
I first went to Normandy in 1974. I was a 27-year-old news photographer shooting the French presidential election, and my visit happened to coincide with the 30th anniversary of the D-Day landings. I ...
In 1976, National Geographic asked actor Robert Redford to follow in the footsteps of the Wild West's greatest outlaws. This ...
It smells of manure and is stained by tobacco juice. It's where tough men dance to keep loose and a few men say their last words. In the late 1990s, National Geographic spent a season on the rodeo ...
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India's rare black tiger debuts on National Geographic cover: Meet photographer Prasenjeet Yadav
For its October 2025 edition, National Geographic has selected a breathtaking ... Indian photographers whose work has been recognised by the magazine’s cover in its 135-year illustrious history.
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