
2014
The Siberian discovery of the best-preserved woolly mammoth on record has teams of experts working around the globe, and around the clock, on some of the most ambitious projects in science. In Russia, paleontologists are conducting a historic autopsy on the 40,000-year-old beast to find out how it lived, and how it died. Meanwhile labs in South Korea and at Harvard University are using the latest advances in DNA manipulation in hopes of cloning the furry giant and introducing it to the modern world.

Beavers: Patagonia invaders

Seen From Here, I Feel Like Belonging

Cheetahs of the Linyanti

Fuel

Making An Ancient Forest - Kalkalpen National Park

Laos from Above

Intelligent Trees

Africa: The Serengeti

Alaska: Spirit of the Wild

Amazon

Mabu: Saving the Secret Forest

The Last Trapper

Kakadu: Land of the Crocodile

A Road in India

Over Hawaii

Snake Man

The Emotional World of Farm Animals

Askania Reserve

The Leopard Son

Coral Reef Adventure