The U.S. was once the world’s most geographically mobile society. Now we’re stuck in place—and that’s a very big problem.
Are humans the only species to drive another to extinction? Tom Ruppel | Dixon, California ...
Migrant farmworkers are on the front lines of the H5N1 surge — but deportation fears complicate virus surveillance ...
Latin America is facing the consequences of the suspension and cuts to the United States Agency for International Development ...
In an interview with FE at the Kerala Literature Festival, Erpenbeck talks about her previous works, the art and free speech ...
Morocco is increasingly a focus of European alliance-building and investment, including in illegally occupied Western Sahara.
Experience the wonder of the Serengeti, home to the largest mammal migration and diverse wildlife, including big cats and ...
National Geographic Explorer Paul Salopek tells host Carolyn Beeler about his walk across South Korea's Saemangeum, a tidal flat on the coast of the Yellow Sea. It was once home to all kinds of birds, ...
A woman, part of a group of dozens of Chinese migrants smuggled to Coral Gables, said she had to leave after she spoke out ...
Here’s one way to visualize the imprecision: Any time you’re looking at a chart of future population projections, there is a ...
For decades, the leading theory for the ubiquity of Indo–European languages was that early farmers, living in a region known ...
For decades, conservationists have pushed for changes to U.S. 64, a busy two-lane highway to the popular Outer Banks that ...
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