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5 captivating images from National Geographic's Pictures of the Year

Popular Science

'Individually, these photographs speak to beauty, fragility, and wonder.' A sperm whale floats amid shards of polar pack ice, dead and decomposing, mouth hanging open. When photographer Roie Galitz captured the scene with a drone, the image was so arresting that it took a moment to notice the hungry female polar bear stretching her jaw to break through the whale's leathery skin. Galitz was leading a photography expedition along Norway's Svalbard archipelago when he spotted a blackened blob floating on the horizon. As the icebreaker drew close, he could see (and smell) that the blob was a massive decaying carcass releasing an occasional exhalation of noxious gas, like a big air cushion.


Wolf uses tool in stunning video

Popular Science

The gray wolf reeled in a crab trap with a rope, sparking a debate among biologists. Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent every weekday. Some 300 miles north of Vancouver, nestled among the rocky bays and forests of the Haíɫzaqv Nation, a wily gray wolf helps itself to a snack. On its own, this isn't remarkable and happens all the time. But a wild wolf swimming to a buoy, reeling it in, and then pulling an underwater trap to shore before eating the bait?


10 captivating images from National Geographic's Photo Ark

Popular Science

Since 2006, the project has photographed 17,000 species in the world's zoos, aquariums, and wildlife sanctuaries. Photographs from the Photo Ark will be featured in the inaugural exhibition at the National Geographic Museum of Exploration in Washington D.C. Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent every weekday. A picture is said to be worth a thousand words, but some photographs are worth 17,000. Well, 17,000 species, that is. For's Photo Ark project, photographer Joel Sartore is documenting all species living in the world's zoos, aquariums, and wildlife sanctuaries.


Watch the mesmerizing first-ever footage of a rare Antarctic squid

Popular Science

Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent every weekday. Oceanographers on an excursion in the Southern Ocean captured a chance, unprecedented encounter with a sizable deep-sea squid. While piloting a remotely operated submersible 7,000 feet below the ocean surface from aboard the Schmidt Ocean Institute's research vessel Falkor (too), experts glimpsed a three-foot-long Gonatus antarcticus specimen. But according to National Geographic's announcement, the team wasn't even supposed to be in that location when they stumbled across the elusive cephalopod. "The ice blocks were moving so fast, it would put all the ships in danger, so we had to rearrange everything," said Manuel Novillo, a researcher at the Instituto de Diversidad y Ecología Animal.


Filmmaker James Cameron on penguins, arctic cold, and lowlight cameras

Popular Science

James Cameron wasn't near the penguins this time around, but he is extremely familiar with their environment. "When I went to Antarctica myself, I had a Nikon still camera adapted to the cold with special lubricants," he tells Popular Science. "I went to the South Pole and the film shattered in my hand when I tried to change it. I took a video camera, I wrapped it in a heating pack and it [died] in two minutes. I have a good sense of what it takes to take conventional equipment into that environment and survive."


5 fascinating wildlife images from National Geographic's Pictures of the Year

Popular Science

An emperor penguin chick waddles to the edge of a cliff and jumps, plummeting 50 feet to the icy waters below. National Geographic captured the daring penguin plunge via a drone camera, marking the first time the behavior had ever been recorded on film. An image (seen below) documenting the moment also made the final list of the magazine's Pictures of the Year 2024 honorees. The annual Pictures of the Year list is narrowed down from 2.3 million photographs and celebrate our spectacularly diverse planet. From the imposing sand dunes of Egypt's Western Desert to a farmer in Romania dealing with a changing environment, the images bring stories to life in stunning detail.

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Meet the real-life Indiana Jones! Explorer Albert Lin has discovered lost cities in Mexico, Sudan and Scotland - and was almost crushed by a BOULDER while searching for a mysterious civilization in Israel

Daily Mail - Science & tech

Albert Lin might hunt for lost cities, and occasionally wear a wide-brimmed hat, but he and Indiana Jones couldn't be more different in their methods. While Indy had to make do with nothing more high-tech than his whip, this real-life explorer is bringing the best tech out there. Using cutting-edge tools, Albert has uncovered hidden cities of the past everywhere from Scotland to Sudan. Speaking to MailOnline, Albert revealed how he was inches away from being crushed by a boulder while searching for a mysterious civilization in Israel - surviving only thanks to his prosthetic leg. Albert and Indiana Jones might share a taste in hats and adventure but their techniques couldn't be more different Albert Lin is a National Geographic Explorer who uses technology to rediscover lost cities.


How the spirit of ancient Stonehenge was captured with a 21st-century drone

National Geographic

Reuben Wu, a British photographer and visual artist based in Chicago, was first introduced to National Geographic as most people are: When he was a child, he enjoyed looking at the magazines his father subscribed to for decades. He dreamed of seeing his photographs in the same magazine--and even on the cover. So when National Geographic asked him to photograph an iconic monument he knows well, he was ready to work. Last summer, Wu experienced a stark contrast of modern and prehistoric, as he used drones and artificial light to photograph Stonehenge, one of the best-known prehistoric monuments, while hearing honking cars passing by. The site in Wiltshire, England, is bisected by the A303--a major road that may soon be in a tunnel should a 2020 proposal become reality--which means motorists may have seen Wu's photo shoot and lit-up drones.


Watching this AI-assisted art video is like tripping on acid in the Matrix

#artificialintelligence

Jason Silva, futurist and host of National Geographic's "Brain Games," recently published a mind-bending YouTube video combining the technological prowess of AI with the artistic creativity of someone who believes in the power of psychoactive experiences. It's called "Dreaming while awake: a journey into ourselves." The description on Silva's YouTube channel describes the video as: The first art piece of the singularity: born from a human-AI collaboration by Jason Silva, Hueman Instrument and digital intelligence. Personally, I'd describe it as a surrealistic experience that seems equal parts Ted Talk and Burning Man. And, I'd add, it makes me want to eat a bunch of psychedelic mushrooms and think about the future.


AI Being Tapped to Understand What Whales Say to Each Other - AI Trends

#artificialintelligence

AI is being applied to whale research, especially to understand what whales are trying to communicate in the audible sounds they make to each other in the ocean. For example, marine biologist Shane Gero has worked to match clicks coming from whales around the Caribbean island nation of Dominica, to behavior he hopes will reveal the meanings of the sounds they make. Gero is a behavioral ecologist affiliated with the Marine Bioacoustics Lab at Aarhus University in Denmark, and the Department of Biology of Dalhousie University of Halifax, Nova Scotia. Gero works with a team from Project CETI, a nonprofit that aims to apply advanced machine learning and state-of-the-art robotics to listen to and translate the communication of whales. Project CETI has recently announced a five-year effort to build on Gero's work with a research project to try to decipher what sperm whales are saying to each other, according to a recent account in National Geographic.