Commemorating the 20th anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks, the six-part limited series 9/11: One Day in America will premiere August 29 at 9/8c National Geographic
NG Documentary Films partners with filmmaker Dawn Porter on feature documentary Red Summer, which follows journalist DeNeen Brown as she digs into the events that lead to one of the worst episodes of racial violence in America's history.
Exciting evidence emerges of civilizations lost for centuries under the waves, from mysterious underwater pyramids off the coast of Japan to the fabled city of Atlantis itself.
In 2018 alone, the U.S. had over 31,000 overdoses from synthetic opioids like fentanyl. But what makes fentanyl so dangerous, and where did it come from?
When it comes to viruses jumping from animals to humans, bats hold a unique place in the transmission chain. Christopher Golden and James Longman investigate an abandoned mine for signs of poaching or viruses impacting the bat population.
THE LAST ICE tells the story of the Inuit communities fighting to protect the disappearing Arctic that has been their home for centuries. From National Geographic Pristine Seas, THE LAST ICE, premieres on National Geographic Channel this October.
1500 years before the construction of the Ming Dynasty wall was constructed, the Han Dynasty defended the borders of China from invaders with a Great Wall of their own.
Bull sharks can swim from salt water into fresh water, and on the coast of South of Africa these sharks occasionally encounter Africa's deadliest animal, the hippo.