National Geographic June 2019

CONDITION  Acceptable, unmarked text, reading and cover wear

CONTENTS

Features

A Wildlife Watch Special Report – Wildlife Tourism – It’s a lucrative part of the booming global travel industry, fueled by social media users’ love of posing with exotic animals. But what wildlife tourists attractions do to amuse humans can have brutal consequences for animals. By Natasha Daly; Photographs by Kirsten Luce

Pangolins – The mammal is killed for its scales and meat. By Rachael Bald; Photographs by Brent Stirton

The Brave Ones – These women rangers are shaking up the conservation landscape. By Lindsay N Smith; Photographs by Brent Stirton

Pacific Ring Of Fire – This 25,000-mile-long hot zone threatens growing populations. By Manuel Canales and Matthew W Chwastyk

Seaweed That Feeds – A stunning array of life fills the Sargasso Sea. By James Prosek; Photographs by David Doubilet and David Liitschwager

Proof  – On Hallowed Ground Beaches – Over the decades, a photographer has returned to the shore of Normandy to capture a place forever defined by war. Story and photographs by David Burnett

Embark

The Big Idea – In Search of the Kissing Bug – Through some 300,000 people in the U.S. have this parasitic infection, many don’t know it. By Daisy Hernandez

Genius – Ma Jun – He gives people in China the power to fight pollution. By Rachel Hartigan Shea

Also

Baby Planets

Popcorn Robots

Fluorescent

Explore

Getting There – Trek to the Deep – In Vietnam, jungle and leeches greet hikers venturing into two of Earth’s largest caves. By Alessandro Cere

Through The Lens – In a paradise on and isolated coral atoll, a photographer discovers he’s just part of the ecosystem. By Thomas P Peschak

Also

Dragonfly Tricks

Movie Soundmaking

Queer History

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