Magazines
TV Schedule
Disney+
National Geographic
National Geographic
National Geographic
Science
Travel
Animals
Culture & History
Environment
Science
Travel
Animals
Culture & History
Environment
Photographer Page
María Stenzel
Migratory beekeepers transfer bees from a thriving hive to a weaker one in Dos Palos, California. A story in the May 1993 issue documented the careers of beekeepers who transport hives all across the country to pollinate crops.
Off the coast of Antarctica, a Weddell seal swims over a sea floor scattered with pink starfish. Weddell seals can dive almost 2,000 feet underwater for almost an hour with just one breath.
In this picture from the December 1994 issue, people gaze out at the Manhattan skyline at sunrise while on the Staten Island ferry. The picture accompanied a story about the legacy of poet Walt Whitman.
In Antarctica, a gentoo penguin chick receives a meal of regurgitated krill and small fish from a parent penguin. Gentoo penguins choose nesting sites inland, away from ice.
In Antarctica, a gentoo penguin chick receives a meal of regurgitated krill and small fish from a parent penguin. Gentoo penguins choose nesting sites inland, away from ice.
In this picture from the December 1994 issue, people gaze out at the Manhattan skyline at sunrise while on the Staten Island ferry. The picture accompanied a story about the legacy of poet Walt Whitman.
Lautaro, an active volcano, looms over the surface of Pío XI Glacier in southern Chile. Chile's sprawling ice fields are among the world's largest outside the polar regions.
Forceful winds turn the Río Paine into white water in Chile's Torres del Paine National Park. While Patagonia remains one of the wildest places on earth, such fast rivers could be a tempting source of hydropower.
Petals from almond trees drop on the ground around beehives, which are moved from orchard to orchard across the country to pollinate crops. The almond industry is so large that experts estimate 70% of commercially kept honeybees are used to pollinate almond trees.
Sunlight glows on the impressive and gigantic Torres del Paine National Park in Chile's Patagonia. The park welcomes a quarter of a million guests every year.