NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC MAGAZINE


Meaning of NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC MAGAZINE in English

monthly magazine of geography, archaeology, anthropology, and exploration, providing the armchair traveler with literate and accurate accounts and unsurpassed photographs and maps to comprehend those pursuits. It is published in Washington, D.C. The magazine was founded in 1888 and still is published by a nonprofit corporation, the National Geographic Society. The society originally intended the periodical to be oriented toward the United States, but the nature of its articles soon made it a magazine with a world view. Under the editorship of Gilbert Hovey Grosvenor, it attained a circulation of 1,000,000 by 1926. National Geographic was one of the first magazines to reproduce colour photographs, and it was also the leader in printing photographs of undersea life, views from the stratosphere, and animals in their natural habitats (exotic or endangered animals are often subjects). The magazine became world famous for its richly illustrated articles on the various geographic regions of the world; meanwhile, it kept to its creed: Only what is of a kindly nature is printed about any country or people. These features included substantial information on the environmental, social, and cultural aspects of the areas covered and their peoples. Proceeds from the magazine help support the society's scientific expeditions.

Britannica English vocabulary.      Английский словарь Британика.