Mairson, Alan
More information on this subject can be found in National Geographic Vol. 208, nr. 2, aug. 2005, p. [XXII]
Ackroyd, Peter
Cope, Julian
Quinn-Judge, Paul
Safina, Carl
Carried by the longest wingspans of any bird, they soar for thousands of miles without ever setting webbed foot on land.
Roşca, Tana
Ivanoff, Jacques
In island-dappled waters of the Andaman Sea, a nomadic way of life hangs in the balance.
Achenbach, Joel
Burnar, Ion
Zwingle, Erla
In the centuries leading up to the birth of the empire, ancient Italy saw the rise and fall of a host of culture - Umbrians, Samnites, Faliscans, and others. All left their mark on the life of the modern country. Now archaeologists are learning more about how these early Italians thought, fought, worked, and worshipped.
Wainaina, Binyavanga
Gheorghe, Mihai
Greere, Vasile
Popa, Florentin
Kaufmann, Carol
Vigilant mother cheetahs in Kenya 's Masai Mara Reserve must fight the odds - and stronger predators - as they raise their cubs on the run.
Marculis-Zătrean, Ana
Webster, Donovan
Spilling Across four Arab nations, the world 's largest sand desert has been defined as much by Bedouin tradition as by geography. New oil and politics are changing the definition
Stângaciu, Ştefan
Laza, Doru
Anca, Petre
Boerescu, Cristian
Desene de Cristina Lucaciu
Dragomirescu, Andreea
Chirilă, Pavel
Motorca, Gheorghe
Danciu, Emil
Guillermoprieto, Alma
After 500 years, indigenous people return to power in a restless land.
Larmer, Brook
A Himalayan kingdom trades poverty and isolation for GNH - Gross National Happiness - and a daring move to democracy.
Vişneac, Antonie (dr.)
Tayler, Jeffrey
Isolated in Morocco 's High Atlas range, the mountain Berbers take pride in holding on to a traditional culture now largely lost to their urban kin. But life is still a hard climb in these rugged hills.