National Geographic
PHOTO IN THE NEWS: Pink Iguana Species Discovered
| | The little-known reptile from the Galapagos fills a crucial gap in the evolution of land iguanas, scientists say. But its future may not be as rosy. |
Meteorite Triggered Ancient New York Tsunami?
| | A strike off Long Island may have sparked a tsunami that today would flood lower Manhattan, says a new study based on the discovery of telltale rocks. |
"Nanodiamond" Find Supports Comet Extinction Theory
| | The discovery of microscopic diamonds in 12,900-year-old soil supports the controversial idea that comet swarms caused a die-off of ice age mammals, a new study says. |
Leap Second Added to 2008 -- Tech Glitches to Come?
| | Just one second tacked on to the world's clocks in 2008 may create problems for systems dependent on time, such as navigation systems and stock exchanges. |
BEST NEWS PHOTOS OF 2008: Editors' Picks
| | See the National Geographic Digital Media photo editors' favorite photos from National Geographic News's 2008 "Week in Photos" galleries. |
Biggest Science Stories: Bloggers' Picks for 2008
| | National Geographic News asked six science bloggers to each choose the most important, most overlooked, and strangest stories of 2008. |
VIDEO: Airliner Flies on Plant Fuel
| | Air New Zealand says a test flight Tuesday was the first commercial-jet journey to use a fuel that is equal parts biofuel and standard jet fuel. |
Quake Swarm Hits Yellowstone; Something Bigger to Come?
(read more)Ancient Cheetah Fossil Points to Old World Roots?
| | The big cats originated in Africa or Asia, not North America as previously thought, according to a new study on a two-million-year-old skull. |
TOP TEN DINOSAUR & FOSSIL FINDS: Most Read of 2008
| | Bizarre prehistoric creatures--sea monsters, gargantuan rodents, a redheaded Neanderthal--are among the stars of the most read stories on dinosaurs and fossils by National Geographic News in 2008. |
Bizarre Squid Sex Techniques Revealed
| | New insights into the animals intimate encounters include species that cut holes into their partners for sex, squid that swap genders, and males that deploy flesh-burrowing sperm. |













Leave a Reply