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Aided by nurses, the 18-year-old mother delivered a baby girl.Editor in ChiefPUBLISHED December 26, 2019Say the words âNational Geographic,â 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 Earthâfrom the highest mountains to the deepest oceans, from jungles to deserts, from the biggest metropolises to the most remote countrysides. For âGhost Cats,â 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. âP22 Day is celebrated every year in Los Angeles.âGRAND TETON NATIONAL PARK, Wyoming Sent to Wyoming on assignment in 2014, British photographer Charlie Hamilton James became fascinated with the regionâs animal life and ended up temporarily resettling his family in Jackson Hole. âThis is what I love most about camera traps,â says National Geographic Deputy Photography Editor Kathy Moran. âThis image haunts me like few others,â 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 Geographicâs January 2017 issue, âGender Revolution.â 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. âThis image took 10 years to make,â says Montana-based photographer Ami Vitale, who first encountered the northern white rhino named Sudan in 2009.
As said here by Susan Goldberg