Jules Stewart reviews Geographical's book of the month, Our Bodies, Our Planet, by Marcus Hall – available to buy now ...
As governments from the Gulf to Beijing quietly buy up farmland around the world, a silent shift in global power is underway ...
The team confirmed an eruption took place this year, one they had previously forecast based on hydrothermal data collected from the vents. ‘This is an extraordinary step forward in submarine ...
The Great Green Wall was meant to reshape the Sahel. But as drought, bureaucracy and fading funds take their toll, its legacy ...
More than 1,000 of the UK’s leading scientists wrote to MPs this morning, 20 November, urging them to attend a landmark ...
A journey across the Galápagos reveals an archipelago in motion, while record visitor numbers test the world’s greatest living laboratory ...
Discover how synthetic biology is shaping the future of disease control with genetically modified mosquitoes from Target ...
Russian military advisers operate in Venezuela, and the Kremlin has sold Caracas about $10billion worth of weapons, including ...
The Brazilian president insisted on a summit shaped by local people, their traditions, and their foods, staging what has been ...
From Africa's boldest environmental dream to Scotland's troubled waters, stay on top of the world with the latest issue of ...
From the quiet woods of Zabola to the high ridges of the Făgăraș Mountains, Bryony Cottam traces Romania’s tangled ...
Simon Stiell, the UNFCCC secretary general, considered COP30 a success for multilateralism. ‘194 countries have said in one voice that the Paris Agreement is working, and resolved to make it go ...