What's inside the yellow box? Amazing discoveries and experiences await you in every issue of National Geographic magazine.
What Longer Life Could Mean
Embracing Ingenuity, Constantly Evolving
PORTRAITS THAT TRULY SEE THEM • In Uganda, a photographer collaborates with women who have special needs to showcase their individuality and creativity.
THE BACKSTORY • A PHOTOGRAPHER AND A GROUP OF WOMEN WITH DISABILITIES UNITE TO COMBAT STEREOTYPES.
Red, White, and Blue Zones • EARTH’S LONGEST-LIVED PEOPLE DWELL IN FIVE ‘BLUE ZONES’—BUT THEIR HEALTHY WAYS OF EATING CAN BE FOUND IN PARTS OF AMERICA.
Toll of a ‘typical American’ diet
LUJÁN AGUSTI
Hidden DNA is a tracking tool
DREAM WEAVERS, IN REM • AT NIGHT, WHEN JUMPING SPIDERS ARE ASLEEP, IT SEEMS THEY SEE THINGS IN THEIR DREAMS.
From crab shells to batteries
BEST OF THE WORLD • Our annual list highlights travel destinations that educate, illuminate, and spark connections and wonder.
Dodecanese Islands, Greece
TULI BLOCK, BOTSWANA
Louang-phabang, Laos
CHOQUEQUIRAO, PERU
LIVING TO THE LIMITS • FOR A NEW SERIES ON LONGEVITY, ACTOR CHRIS HEMSWORTH TESTS BOTH ACCEPTED AND EXTREME STRATEGIES FOR ENHANCING HEALTH.
LIVING LONGER AND BETTER • SCIENTISTS USING THE LATEST CUTTING-EDGE TECHNOLOGIES ARE REVEALING THE INTRICACIES OF HUMAN AGING AND SEEKING DRUGS TO SLOW IT, OR EVEN REVERSE IT.
HOW OUR CELLS AGE • Over the past three decades, biomedical researchers have identified a number of mechanisms, or “hallmarks,” of aging to explain the cellular and molecular processes that damage cells. Grouped here into three categories, nine of these are at the core of cutting-edge efforts to slow aging—the leading risk factor for many major diseases, including cancer.
FACING THE FACTS
SLAYING ZOMBIES
FOR LOVE OF MANATEES • EXTINCTION LOOMED FOR THESE GENTLE MARINE MAMMALS INFLORIDA JUST DECADES AGO. PEOPLE RALLIED, AND MANATEE NUMBERS ROSE. BUT RECENT DIE-OFF SARE WORRYING.
MANATEES ON THE MOVE • Florida’s manatees face an uncertain future as warming seas, agricultural runoff, and septic tank seepage jeopardize their main food source—seagrass. But human activity, in some cases, is helping. Water discharged by power plants, for example, provides an unlikely winter refuge.
GENTLE GRAZERS • Manatees evolved adaptations for harvesting and digesting aquatic plants after their land-dwelling ancestors took to water 50 million years ago. But degradation of their watery habitats puts these “sea cows” at risk.
THE KING OF MUSTANG WILL SEE YOU NOW
ANCIENT GATEWAY • Once a pivotal link in the Silk Road network, Nepal’s Mustang district also served as a crossroads for Buddhist scholars, dating back to the 11th century. Following one of the few routes through the Himalaya, merchants traversing Mustang traded Tibetan salt and wool for spices and grains from the Indian subcontinent until the 1950s, when China’s annexation of Tibet closed the corridor.
15TH-CENTURY MASTERPIECE • In its heyday, Lo Manthang, the Kingdom of Lo’s capital, was a center of Tibetan Buddhist art and architecture, including Thubchen Lhakhang, a temple reconstructed here in its original glory. Today, after centuries of isolation, the region is opening up, threatening the Lo-pa people’s cultural heritage.
Ramping Up Tradition • BOLIVIAN SKATEBOARDERS ARE REVIVING INDIGENOUS FASHIONS TO MAKE A STATEMENT.
MATTHIEU PALEY • FROM OUR PHOTOGRAPHERS