Learning about countries and nationalities - ESL worksheets
Since 1888, National Geographic has introduced millions of readers to remarkable stories, scenes and discoveries from around the world. The magazine’s cover images have been an iconic elemen…
Diversity in small businesses doesn’t just help promote inclusiveness and equality. Learn the benefits of and how to create a more diverse workforce in your business.
Vintage Photos Of Canada's First Nations People (1880s)
AMMAN, Jordan (AP) - Just a year out of college, Jordan's crown prince has made his debut on the world's biggest stage, addressing the U.N. General Assembly...
For this week’s #FriFotos theme, FOR SALE, we chose this photo of the Lok Baintan floating market near Banjarmasin (the capital of South Kalimantan, Indonesia) that Hary Muhammad submitted to the National Geographic Traveler Photo Contest. Find out how to enter!
We teamed up with the UN to illustrate key messages to help stop the spread of COVID-19. We asked creative thinkers from every corner of the globe to help
The British, the rebels, the pain and the glory...
Explore the world with National Geographic's experts on a variety of unique and engaging trips, from wildlife safaris and expedition cruises to photography expeditions and family trips.
Boston.com have posted on Nat Geo's 2011 Photo Contest and the competition looks steep. See the 54 spectacular photos they curated for your viewing pleasure in the full post. Let us know which are your favorites and why, in the comments.
International Day of Living Together in Peace was established by the United Nations in 2017. This day serves as a reminder of peaceful coexistence.
With more than 200,000 members living in Canada, The Cree are one of the largest groups of First Nations in North America. The
Explore the world with National Geographic’s experts on a variety of unique and authentic trips, from wildlife safaris and classic train journeys to photography workshops and family adventures.
Australian fashion is taking notice of the country’s oldest design traditions – and we’re only just scratching the surface
Can you see the sea horse? This photo was taken in Page, AZ during our last road trip. Strange shapes start to appear in the layers carved into these slot canyons
We might head somewhere a little bit warmer, though.
Residential School Art, Truth Various Artwork
An upcoming exhibition at the National Media Museum showcases some of the most important photographs ever taken. Here are the highlights. Mildly NSFW on account of nudity.
You can now pay a virtual visit to the U.S. Civil Rights Trail (USCRT), which is a collection of places that played a significant role in the civil rights movement. Get the details here.
Locate different countries on a world map and learn about their flags with this fun Olympic mapping activity you can do while watching the Olympic Games.
This map features Africa's ethnic groups, identified by name and language. Includes beautiful illustrations and interesting facts about the diverse peoples that inhabit the continent. Published in December 1971 as half of a two–map set with the "Heritage of Africa" map, and as a companion to the article "The Zulus: Black Nation in a Land of Aparteid."
First Equatorial Guinea Bodypainting Festival (EGBF) was a smashing success and a stunning display of beauty and talented artistry. Top artists from 18 countries around the World as well as local artists got together to create spectacular living artworks. Among artists, there were 11 bodypainting World Champions.
As a self-proclaimed wannabe National Geographic wildlife photographer, my aim is always to get as close as is safely possible to animals in their natural
Tongariro National Park, New Zealand © www.chiarasalvadori.com
Nikita is Nêhiyaw (Plains Cree) from Moosomin First Nation.
My vision on this image was to tell a story about the Appaloosa and the Nez Pierce. I chose the best of our jewelry including the Warrior cuff, Squash blossom necklaces and a beautiful rendition of a Nez Pierce wedding dress made for us by Myka. Photography with a Purpose started as a story and fund raiser project. Our mission is to donate the profits to the Navajo models and nation, while providing our clients a beautiful piece of Brit West photography. I love photography and see this as an outlet to help others. Our prints are offered in Fine Art Hot press Cotton Paper or incredible metallic gloss in a sophisticated 10 color ink systems for the ultimate in fine art reproductions. Our giclee offered on the finest Epsom smooth matt cotton paper, or incredible Epson Metallic Gloss paper. The Nez Perce or Nimiipu people originally referred to their type of horse as the Ma’amin. A selectively bred horse, noted and sought after by explorers, traders, and surrounding tribes, the Nez Perce horse flourished on the rich grasslands of the Palouse and numbered in the tens of thousands before disruption, war, and flight brought them to the world’s attention. No equine feat of courage and endurance is more famous or more spectacular than the 1877 flight of the Nez Perce. In that year, the United States Government demanded that the Wallowa band of Nez Perce leave their homeland forever and take up residence on a continually diminishing reservation. The band complied, but a wave of violence on both sides resulted, and, faced with the threat of an all-out war, a number of Nez Perce chose flight. Between July and November of 1877, about 750 Nez Perce men, women, and children with over two thousand horses outran—sometimes by weeks—a similar force of U.S. Cavalry. When the Nez Perce were finally intercepted a few miles from the Canadian border, most surrendered. Their remaining horses, (many of them starving and exhausted), were exterminated. Others were dispersed. Despite—or perhaps because of—the national fame these horses had won during this well-publicized feat of endurance, no move was made to preserve the breed’s integrity. Out crossed through generations to ranch and draft horses, they were almost forgotten until 1938, when the efforts of Claude Thompson saved what he calculated to be a remaining few hundred horses from extinction. The Appaloosa Horse Registry began. (DreamHorseFarms.com)
"I was given a key that had unlocked the door to exploring futuristic indigenous concepts within my own mind, and more imaginative concepts as a whole."
Here’s a slide show of images from two climbers. First are Jimmy Chin’s spectacular mountain vistas (with captions by Chin), followed by Conrad …
Aaron Carapella couldn't find a map showing the original names and locations of Native American tribes as they existed before contact with Europeans. That's why the Oklahoma man designed his own map.
June is Indigenous History Month. Celebrate Indigenous contributions & culture while remembering the colonial legacy of Residential Schools.
Le militantisme a commencé très tôt dans la vie d’Autumn Peltier. Depuis ses 8 ans, elle défend activement l’eau sacrée dans sa réserve indienne.
Traditional sheep fur worn by shepherds during winter