National Geographic Magazine’s annual photo contest is still under way, but the deadline for submissions is coming up on Friday.
With just one week left until the end of this historic and seemingly endless presidential campaign season, I’ve gathered 20 photos from each of the major campaigns over the past 18 months.
Images of people parading, trick-or-treating, partying, or getting scared silly in haunted houses, from around the world.
Portraits and interviews with native Canadians abused within the government’s Indian Residential School system
Sculpture by the Sea in Australia, a bison roundup in Utah, fighting in Iraq and Syria, on the campaign trail in New Hampshire and Florida, pipeline protests in North Dakota, and much more.
Recent subterranean scenes from around the world
A small camp in Calais, France, housing nearly 8,000 migrants hoping to cross into England, is being evacuated and torn down in what French authorities are calling a “humanitarian” operation.
For much of the past year, Associated Press photographers have been gathering images of the people and places at the heart of multiple issues dividing Americans this election year.
Can satellite images of our planet's varied terrain make humanity's impact apparent?
Diwali lights in England, a pair of scary clown masks in Nicaragua, a rat stuck in a New York garbage can, a bioluminescent jellyfish in the Marianas Trench, a little Hitler, and much more.
Thousands of Iraqi and Kurdish troops, supported by the United States, France, and Britain, are now in the early stages of a massive operation to retake the Mosul, Iraq's second largest city, from ISIS militants.
One last overview of autumn
The UN estimates at least 1.4 million Haitians are now in need of urgent assistance as clean water, food, and medicine are in short supply.
A 160,000-mile quest to visit all 59 of the country's natural treasures
Earlier today, Libertarian presidential nominee Gary Johnson was asked by a journalist “What would you do, if you were elected, about Aleppo?” Johnson replied with his own question: "What is Aleppo?"