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Celebrating 135 years! Explore the ‘cave of bones’, rewild 500 baby sharks, and spend 2 years in the Amazon.

A LETTER FROM THE EDITOR
George III Shiras, Nat Geo Image Collection
Since our founding in 1888, National Geographic has been dedicated to expanding our knowledge of the world through exploration. We’ve sent expeditions to the world’s deepest cave, across 2,000 miles of dense rainforest in the Congo, to shipwrecks like Endurance and Titanic we’ve even been to the moon with NASA. We do all this, in part, because we believe that understanding our world is critical to inspiring a desire to protect it. And, of course, bringing you these incredible stories in words and images and video is what we love to do at National Geographic.
For our 135th anniversary, we’ve just released a number of exciting stories about some of our most recent explorations: a dispatch from our two-year expedition across the Amazon, new findings about our human ancestors in caves in Africa, a groundbreaking project to rewild endangered sharks in Indonesia, and much more. This work is, for us, both exciting and important. And we couldn’t do it without the support of people like you. Join us as a Premium subscriber today and help us continue to tell stories like these about our wild, weird, and wonderful world.
Sincerely,
Nathan Lump
Editor in Chief
National Geographic Media
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CELEBRATING 135 YEARS OF EXPLORATION
PHOTOGRAPH BY ROBERT CLARK
This ancient society tried to stop El Niño—with child sacrifice
Desperate to stop the torrential rains, the Chimú people of Peru offered up their most precious resource to the gods: their future. Researchers have only found out the scope of the sacrifice in recent years.
SACRIFICING TOO MUCH
THOMAS P. PESCHAK, NAT GEO IMAGE COLLECTION
500 baby sharks to be released: An exclusive look at an unprecedented mission
A team spanning 15 countries is raising endangered sharks from aquariums and reintroducing them to the wild, starting in Indonesia. It’s never been done at this scale, but experts think the plan might work.
AH! BABY SHARKS
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