Brazil is fast becoming a serious wine producer, and nowhere is that clearer than in Rio Grande do Sul, where its sparklings ...
Seaweed bathing in Ireland, a trek through Africa’s first designated wilderness quiet park—we asked National Geographic staff ...
Scientists have long observed that cancer patients have a lower risk of Alzheimer’s disease. New research reveals a possible ...
The historic Darwin Ranch is one of the oldest, most remote working guest ranches in the country—just don’t expect luxury.
When the weather turns frightful, nothing beats a steamy bowl of nourishing New England clam chowder. From America’s oldest ...
About 700 million years ago, Earth was entombed in a veneer of ice hundreds of feet thick—a frozen state scientists refer to ...
This story begins like all good ones do, with a 66-year-old man standing on stage, dressed as a goat.
Just 10 miles off the northern tip of mainland Scotland, Orkney is an archipelago of 70 islands, rich in Neolithic relics and nature reserves. The area draws birders and historians from around the ...
Dark matter is a mysterious substance that glues galaxies together. This map from the James Webb Space Telescope could help ...
Some species are at their most active in winter, whether they’re flying, feeding, or mating. From elephant seals in ...
Massi rushes down the slope, leaps across a slow-running stream and disappears inside a thick bush. Rosie, his young ...
From oats to beans to chicory root, each type of fiber acts differently inside the body. New research is revealing how fiber ...