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Best of the decade


National Geographic Society
National Geographic Partners
LLC
BADAKHSHAN
2019Say
“best”
“honor”
United Nations
UN
P22
National Park Service
the National Park Service
Grand Teton National Park
HASTINGS
Sierra Leone
Abron
Avery
“Princess of Tundra
the National Geographic film Free Solo
AURORA
the University of Colorado’s Visible Human Project
LAIKIPIA COUNTY
Pejeta Conservancy


Lynsey Addario
Geographic
Young
Stephanie Sinclair
Ghada
Paul Salopek
John Stanmeyer
Steve Winter
Charlie Hamilton James
Kathy Moran
Sierra Leone
Pete Muller
Joel Sartore
” Sartore
Wayne Lawrence
Julie
Robin Hammond
Avery Jackson
Revolution.” Hammond
Susan Goldberg
Kristina Khudi
Photographer Evgenia Arbugaeva
Anand Varma
” Varma
Alex Honnold
Jimmy Chin
” Chin
Lynn Johnson
Kurt Mutchler
Susan Potter
Cathy Newman
Ami Vitale
Joseph Wachira


Afghan
American
Yemeni
British
Asian
African
LGBTQ
Nenets
Siberia’s
Czech


Americas
Red Sea
Winter hiked
Southern California’s
the Russian Arctic
the Yamal Peninsula


Los Angeles’s
Griffith Park
Los Angeles.”GRAND TETON NATIONAL PARK
AUGUSTINE
Photo Ark
Yosemite National Park’s El Capitan—climbing


Afghanistan
London
Yemen
Kansas City
Missouri
HAJJAH
Tahani
the United States
DJIBOUTI
Djibouti
East Africa
Somalia
Myanmar
California
nation’s
Hollywood
Wyoming
Jackson Hole
West Africa
ST
FLORIDA
Nebraska
planet’s
Florida
FLINT
Michigan
Flint’s
India
New Zealand
Hammond
”YAMAL PENINSULA
Russia
afternoon’s
Nenets
RIVERSIDE
Berkeley
YOSEMITE
Colorado
Kenya
Montana
Sudan

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Positivity     42.00%   
   Negativity   58.00%
The New York Times
SOURCE: https://www.nationalgeographic.com/photography/best-pictures-the-decade-2010s.html
Write a review: National Geographic
Summary

Aided by nurses, the 18-year-old mother delivered a baby girl.Editor in ChiefPUBLISHED December 26, 2019Say the words “National Geographic,” and the first thing that comes to mind is photography.We are known, and have been for most of the past 130 years, for taking people on visual journeys into every corner of the Earth—from the highest mountains to the deepest oceans, from jungles to deserts, from the biggest metropolises to the most remote countrysides. For “Ghost Cats,” a December 2013 National Geographic feature about elusive urban cougars, Winter hiked the park, setting up hidden motion-sensitive cameras that could be viewed remotely. “P22 Day is celebrated every year in Los Angeles.”GRAND TETON NATIONAL PARK, Wyoming Sent to Wyoming on assignment in 2014, British photographer Charlie Hamilton James became fascinated with the region’s animal life and ended up temporarily resettling his family in Jackson Hole. “This is what I love most about camera traps,” says National Geographic Deputy Photography Editor Kathy Moran. “This image haunts me like few others,” photographer Pete Muller says. New Zealand-born photographer Robin Hammond, who has won recognition for his images of LGBTQ people around the world, met Avery Jackson while on assignment for National Geographic’s January 2017 issue, “Gender Revolution.” Hammond was photographing nine-year-olds, boys and girls, in eight countries. For 15 years National Geographic photographer Lynn Johnson and photo editor Kurt Mutchler tracked the story of Susan Potter, a woman who declared that she wanted to be frozen after death so that her sliced-up corpse could be used to create a research database. “This image took 10 years to make,” says Montana-based photographer Ami Vitale, who first encountered the northern white rhino named Sudan in 2009.

As said here by Susan Goldberg