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How Sand Mining Destroys One Home to Build Another

AdultsConstructionEducationEnvironmentSocietyPolitics
As Singapore dredges sand out from beneath Cambodia’s mangroves one woman is faced with the erasure of her beloved home.

How To Survive The First Hour Of A Nuclear Blast

AdultsEnvironmentLifeNatureSurvivalHow-toSociety
The situation has played out in TV and movies for years, but what should you really do if a nuke detonated near you?

Why Is Lyme Disease Getting Worse?

AdultsHealthHumanWorldScienceEnvironment
Lyme disease is spreading like wildfire around the world.

Under the Dark Skies

AdultsHumanNatureSpaceScienceEnvironment
National Geographic partnered with the International Dark-Sky Association to provide families with a true ‘dark sky’ observatory experience, free from the artificial light prevalent in city and suburban communities.

Amphibians Face Mass Extinction as Fungus Spreads Across the World

AdultsAnimalsEnvironmentNatureScience
Results from a recent global survey of amphibians shows that chytrid fungus has threatened twice as many species than previously thought.

How to grow your own glacier

AdultsEnvironmentNatureScience
Explore the ancient methods of growing glaciers, the homemade bodies of ice used as water sources, and how they can be used to combat climate change.

Why are earthquakes so hard to predict?

AdultsEnvironmentNatureScienceNatural Disasters
Take a look at the theories behind why earthquakes occur, what makes them so hard to predict and the warning system technologies we rely on today.

Climate Research Offers Coffee Farmers Hope For Their Crops

AdultsEconomyFoodNatureEnvironment
Guatemala's third largest export after raw sugar and bananas is coffee.

Earth Hour 2019

TeachersEducationEnvironmentTeacher Cafe
This toolkit contains assets which help raise awareness of the nature all around us, tools to empower you and the people around you to take action and advocate for this year's Earth Hour and beyond!

The Biggest Lie About Climate Change

AdultsEnvironmentNatureSocietyScience
You were lied to about climate change.

Descending Into Greenland's Ice Sheets

AdultsFilmNatureSportsScienceEnvironment
Join Will Gadd as he descends into the Greenland ice sheet in the name of exploration and research with University of South Florida professor Jason Gulley.

The Problem With Concrete

AdultsCitiesConstructionHumanEnvironment
This video is in partnership with Bill and Melinda Gates.

Poison Ivy's Evil Plants

AdultsHealthHumanScienceNatureEnvironment
Kyle talks Poison Ivy's deadliest allies, responds to your comments, and more!

Why Don't We Launch Our Trash Into The Sun?

AdultsHealthHumanIndustryEnvironment
Tired of all that STINKY garbage? Chuck it into the sun! Problem solved!

Will Your Country Be The First To Sink?

AdultsConstructionIndustryLifeEnvironmentGlobal WarmingScience
Sea levels are rising, but what does that mean for where you live? What does that mean for the world?

This Is Why The Holidays Can Suck!

AdultsEnvironmentHistoryLifeHumorCulture
Trying to be cheery might make you dreary!

Are we running out of clean water? - Balsher Singh Sidhu

AdultsIndustryNatureScienceEnvironmentSociety
Despite water covering 71% of the planet’s surface, more than half the world’s population endures extreme water scarcity for at least one month a year.

The dangerous and daring race for the South Pole - Elizabeth Leane

AdultsEnvironmentHumanSportsHistoryAdventure
By the early 1900’s, nearly every region of the globe had been visited and mapped, with only two key locations left: the North and South Poles.

Camels Don't Mind Spines In Their Cacti | Nat Geo Wild

AdultsAnimalsNatureScienceWildlifeEnvironment
Camels have adapted to harsh desert conditions that require them to eat thorny plants.

The Unique Wildlife of The Scottish Highlands

AdultsAnimalsEnvironmentMediaNatureWildlife
Be transported to the frozen tundra of Scotland's Cairngorms National Park in this stunning short by filmmaker Max Smith.

The Largest River On Earth Is In The Sky

AdultsNatureScienceEnvironmentBiology
What’s the largest river on Earth? If you said “the Amazon”… you’re only half right. Scientists have discovered an even bigger river in South America, and it’s in the sky above the Amazon rainforest.