national geographics
NSFW Tumblr
find national geographics on porn pin board
national geographics clips
vistale: According to National Geographic, this is what the average American will look like in the year 2050. i better live to 2050 and i better find the fucking fountain of youth. now.
humanoidhistory: The ancient Roman ruins at Baalbek, Lebanon, February 1970.(National Geographic)
venfield8: Meat The Press, National Geographic 2015, V E N F I E L D 8 waterfallsoutmouth
undeadthug: According to National Geographic, this is what the average American will look like in the year 2050
natgeofound: Welts, scars of beauty, pattern the entire back of a Nuba woman in Sudan, 1966.Photograph by Horst Luz, National Geographic Creative
platos-pal: ‘Obscure Landscapes’ (Origami paper, National Geographic and Ink) by Heidi Prescott
ganymedesrocks: plastexxx: “A Greek-style helmet shielded a late sixth-century B.C. Thracian warrior.” National Geographic Magazine, July 1980, “Bulgaria’s Ancient Treasures” Photo: James L. Stanfield Facing Death as a ‘Phallic War Head’;
gentle-insomnia: france, collected from an old national geographic
natgeofound: Three shafts of sunlight illuminate the basilica and its mosaic floor in the Vatican, December 1971.Photograph by Albert Moldvay, National Geographic
arcaneimages: This taxidermy was found inside a late 19th-century French mansion which has been sealed up for more than 100 years. Via National Geographic.
thedapperproject: Photographer Mattias Klum from National Geographic
christinebian: Just watched National Geographic’s “The Last Lions”…animal documentaries always make me tear up! T_T A great film.
An elevated view of the private gardens in Christchurch, New Zealand, January 1972. Photograph by James L. Amos, National Geographic.
we-did-an-internet: arcaneimages: This taxidermy was found inside a late 19th-century French mansion which has been sealed up for more than 100 years. Via National Geographic. Good to know people were just as fucking weird before the internet.
natgeofound: Dummy pilot and seat soar, as engineers test a catapult escape system in Arizona, March 1963.Photograph by Robert Sisson, National Geographic
natgeofound: Thermal springs warm winter bathers in British Columbia, 1966.Photograph by James L. Stanfield, National Geographic
justenoughisplenty: Camping in comfort for once, men go about their chores beside newly discovered Lake Parodi. Here, at about 13,000 feet, the men observed numerous small birds, plus ducks and a gull-like species. They saw no fish. National Geographic
gunsandposes-history: “WEARING GAS MASKS AT THE BENCHES” — A scene in wartime France from National Geographic, April 1917: “It is not alone in the trench that the soldier must guard against poisonous gas and dust. These women soldiers
natgeofound: A flock of birds fly up from an enclosed courtyard in Old Havana, December 1987.Photograph by James L. Stanfield, National Geographic
natgeofound: A shielded dummy in a basement for atomic bomb testing in Nevada, March 1953.Photograph by Volkmar Wentzel, National Geographic
natgeofound: The Agawam prepares to launch from the Submarine Boat Corporation dry dock in Newark, New Jersey, September 1918.Photograph by M. Rosenfeld, National Geographic
natgeofound: Water from the Dez River in Iran is used for irrigating once-parched land, January 1968.Photograph by Frank and Helen Schreider, National Geographic
vintagenatgeographic: Macau National Geographic | December 1932
sagansense: Translucent Creature Photos from the National Geographic archives via staceythinx
natgeofound: Embracing the fjord, a dusk-dimmed Bergen laps against mountain walls, Norway, 1971Photograph by George F. Mobley, National Geographic
natgeofound: A wrecked Zeppelin sits ashore in Mison, France, 1918.Photograph by Paul Thompson, National Geographic
natgeotravel: Street lights pop near small homes with red roofs in Larung Gar, in the Garzé Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, China. Photograph by Lei He, National Geographic Your Shot
hierarchical-aestheticism: arcaneimages: This taxidermy was found inside a late 19th-century French mansion which has been sealed up for more than 100 years. Via National Geographic.
forages: national geographic february 1974
afro-dominicano: Milky Way Meets Desert Sky by Babak Tafreshi As seen on the National Geographic News our Milky Way galaxy gleams in all its splendor, as seen from La Silla observatory in the southern outskirts of the Atacama Desert, Chile.
natgeofound: Two young women stand near a turning aircraft propeller, 1940.Photograph by Luis Marden, National Geographic Creative
natgeofound: Two women give food to a red and green macaw in a city garden in Brazil, 1944.Photograph by W. Robert Moore, National Geographic Creative
petticoatruler: “I totally saw a fox do this on National Geographic. How hard can it be?” Lmao poor polar bear 😂😂
natgeotravel: There is nothing like a brisk swim. Past an Alaskan glacier. Photograph by Nanci Roth, National Geographic Your Shot
nobodylaughsanymoree: dreamingonlygetsyousofar: A rare encounter of a baby gorilla and a chimpanzee examining leaves at the Evaro Gorilla Orphanage in Gabon. Photo Credit & Copyright: National Geographic / Michael Poliz
awesome-picz: The Winners Of The 2015 National Geographic Traveler Photo Contest
humanoidhistory: Relief sculpture in the ancient Maya city of Palenque, Mexico, photographed by Andrew Evans for National Geographic Traveler.
black-and-white: by Frank Wang (via National Geographic’s Photography Contest 2010 - The Big Picture - Boston.com)
luzfosca: Street scene in Lisbon (Lisboa) - Portugal , 1940’s Photograph by W. Robert Moore, National Geographic
black-and-white: (via National Geographic 2011 | Fubiz™)
badveganwolf: imran-suleiman: Photographer Mattias Klum from National Geographic gets close and personal with a lion. “and all of a sudden you feel very small” damn right
sav3mys0ul: Autumn Landscape, Adirondacks Photograph by Michael Melford, National Geographic Sunlight dapples the shoulders of Algonquin and Wright, two of the more than 40 so-called High Peaks that rise above 4,000 feet. Once blighted by logging and
cosmictoquantum: National Geographic’s Amazing Hubble Images (View the entire photoset here)
sav3mys0ul: lori-rocks: Kees Veenenbos: Mars Dutch artist Kees Veenenbos is one of the leading digital artist who creates amazing renderings of space and planetary landscapes. His work has been featured in National geographic on numerous occasions,
publicradiointernational: “Life in Color: Purple” – National Geographic’s exquisite gallery of photos depicting the purple places in our world.
natgeofound: A group of scarabs from the Scarabaeid family, July 1929.Photograph by Edwin L. Wisherd, National Geographic
fierrrrrrce: heavyparlayin: vistale: According to National Geographic, this is what the average American will look like in the year 2050. mesmerizing wowwww lucky americans
vodkapussy: peterfromtexas: Heart surgeon after 23-hour (successful) lung heart transplantation. His assistant is sleeping in the corner saw this in the national geographic best 100, this was my favourite
petticoatruler: “I totally saw a fox do this on National Geographic. How hard can it be?”
natgeofound:A combination sand and rain storm batters a lone automobile in Kuwait, May 1969.Photograph by David Cupp, National Geographic
19withbonyknees: National Geographic photographers are metal as fuck
natgeofound: A kitten aboard a floating Victoria water lily pad in the Philippines, 1935.Photograph by Alfred T. Palmer, National Geographic Creative
The Death of National Geographic (and some payback)
nahsizefoto: National Geographics
seven-minds: Saudi school girls in Jeddah in 1980 photographed by the National Geographic
nerdy-narwhal: thetrekkiehasthephonebox: gridbugs: natgeofound: Irish Guards remain at attention after one guardsman faints in London, England, June 1966.Photograph by James P. Blair, National Geographic Something about this photo is hySTERICAL TO
shslequius: driftingfocus: anogoodrabblerouser: disquietingtruths: universalequalityisinevitable: Robert Sapolsky about his study of the Keekorok baboon troop from National Geographic’s Stress: Portrait of a Killer. Thiiiiiiis, people, thiiiis!
kruhn: tamburina: My sister in the south of Chile. We are sitting at home next to the fireplace in our southern lake house when it suddenly began to pour uncontrollably. Had to rush into the lake to take this snapshot! - Camila Massu/National Geographic
scienceyoucanlove: Who Were the Ancient Bog Mummies? Surprising New Clues Ongoing research suggests at least two 2,000-year-old corpses had traveled before their deaths. Christine Dell’Amore in Copenhagen National Geographic PUBLISHED JULY 18, 2014