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国家地理

When National Geographic Explorer Tamara Merino’s tire blew out in a seemingly desolate area of Australia’s Simpson Desert, she had no idea she was near an entire underground community of 2,000 dwelling in an opal mining outpost called Coober Pedy. Intrigued by their way of life, she’s traveled the world—including Jordan, Lesotho, Tunisia, and Turkey, as captured here—in search of other cave societies to document. Though it’s an increasingly rare way of life in the 21st century, humans have lived in caves for millions of years. This ancient practice isn’t just a remnant of humanity’s past—it can also provide important lessons for how we might adapt to climate change as global warming makes surface dwelling more difficult. Learn more about these cave societies at the link in bio. Videos by @tamaramerino_photography and Recep Akar

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1天前
评论
وَلِيـــــــــــــــدْ
13

1天前

The location in Tunisia is called Matmata in Gabès. In the same city you can find the Hotel Sidi Driss which was used to film the interior scenes of Luke Skywalker's childhood home

James Thomas Donovan
3

1天前

Such hospitality 😍

Víctor Coello
2

1天前

A ver, no es la ciudad rosa de Petra, en Jordania?

Marie-Anne Barnhart
2

1天前

Amazing

Maria
2

1天前

I love it god bless them it’s amazing 😍

Manu Ramírez
2

1天前

😍👏😍👏😍

zohreh
2

23小时前

❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️🔥🔥

prem Rajpurohit
1

23小时前

This is so amazing to see such a beautiful way of living in this modern epoch.😮

Meric Zengel
1

1天前

✨️🤍✨️

ageuzzar fatima1
1

1天前

😍

Conceicao Vaz
1

1天前

😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮

Gurpreet Singh Aulakh
1

23小时前

👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼

Pooja Ray
1

1天前

❤️

Ozylev
1

23小时前

😍

Samira Nezami
1

23小时前

😍😍

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国家地理

When National Geographic Explorer Tamara Merino’s tire blew out in a seemingly desolate area of Australia’s Simpson Desert, she had no idea she was near an entire underground community of 2,000 dwelling in an opal mining outpost called Coober Pedy. Intrigued by their way of life, she’s traveled the world—including Jordan, Lesotho, Tunisia, and Turkey, as captured here—in search of other cave societies to document. Though it’s an increasingly rare way of life in the 21st century, humans have lived in caves for millions of years. This ancient practice isn’t just a remnant of humanity’s past—it can also provide important lessons for how we might adapt to climate change as global warming makes surface dwelling more difficult. Learn more about these cave societies at the link in bio. Videos by @tamaramerino_photography and Recep Akar 

国家地理

Every body deserves a name. With 50,000 unidentified bodies in the U.S., the groundbreaking DNA Doe Project is a dedicated group of scientists, investigators, and researchers working to identify these unnamed people—unraveling decades-old cold cases in the process. Follow their mission when #NamingTheDead premieres Saturday, August 2 at 10/9c on National Geographic. Streaming on @DisneyPlus and @hulu. 

国家地理

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国家地理

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