Birds inspire us every day at Audubon. From long-distance migrants on journeys that span the hemisphere to endemic species that live only one place in the world, we admire them all. We owe a lot to ...
Once certain items have served their primary purpose, many people struggle to find any further use for them. This can lead to a number of items being thrown away without much thought. However, as ...
An image of a man wearing a fedora hat standing near police officers outside the Louvre in Paris has caught the imagination of people online, wondering if he is a detective involved in investigating ...
Salt marshes exist on every coast of the U.S., but these important wetlands are succumbing quickly to the effects of sea level rise caused by climate change. Grace Go of our journalism training ...
Birds don’t recognize borders, and their migrations connect people and places across the Americas. We thought it was time that the Audubon Photography Awards follow their lead. This year we’ve ...
Nikon has announced the winners of its 2025 Small World photomicrography competition, gathering images from all around the world that show off the microscopic universe around us in shocking detail.
Selected from a record-breaking 60,636 entries from 113 countries and territories, the category and overall winners of the world’s leading wildlife photography competition, Wildlife Photographer of ...
South African wildlife photographer Wim van den Heever was announced as the Natural History Museum London's Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2025 for his photograph of a hyena at an abandoned town in ...
Edward Serotta created an archive of 1,230 in-depth interviews with Holocaust survivors about how they lived, both before and after. “Every one of them comes with a story,” he said. The Global Profile ...
From Moon-gazing rattlesnakes to caterpillars with bizarre headgear—this year's winning photos will surely take your breath away. Reading time: Reading time 3 minutes Photographer Qingrong Yang was ...
GRANDFATHER, N.C. — “I looked up toward Grandfather Mountain and could see the fog and the sun peeking through, and I felt it,” Leslie Restivo recounts. “I knew it was coming again.” And the shot ...