February 1, 2004
Sarawak state, Borneo, Malaysia
1998
Maria Stenzel
A Penan boy hauls a wild pig’s head home for cooking. Pigs are the main meat source for Penan nomads, but as the logging industry demolishes foraging habitat, the pigs become less plentiful.
(Text adapted from “Vanishing Cultures,“ August 1999, National Geographic magazine)
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, “Vanishing Cultures,“ August 1999, National Geographic magazine)
February 2, 2004
Hudson Bay, Canada
1996
Flip Nicklin
"Most [female polar bears] keep their young [such as the cub at the bottom in this picture] with them for two and a half years, but many Hudson Bay mothers wean their cubs a year earlier. That allows them to breed every two years instead of the usual three. Perhaps the large number of seals at Hudson Bay influences this fecundity. The abundance of seal carcasses left on the ice might make it possible for young bears to scavenge at an earlier age and become independent sooner."
(Text from "Polar Bears, Stalkers of the High Arctic," January 1998, National Geographic magazine)
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Polar Bears, Stalkers of the High Arctic," January 1998, National Geographic magazine)
February 3, 2004
Grytviken, South Georgia island, Falkland Islands
1998
Maria Stenzel
A cross on South Georgia island stands in honor of Ernest Shackleton, leader in an epic early 20th-century tale of Antarctic survival. Members of his expedition—not a man was lost—erected the monument after their rescue.
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Shackleton: Epic of Survival," November 1998, National Geographic magazine
February 4, 2004
Adirondack State Park, New York
1997
Maria Stenzel
"Shoeing up Mount Skylight, Adirondack resident and part-time guide Kevin Burns appreciates the power of place. ‘I grew up in Albany, which now is busy as an ant farm,‘ he says, ‘everybody racing for their piece of food.‘ But not here. ‘When it snows,‘ he says, ‘I smile.‘"
—From "Adirondacks High," June 1998, National Geographic magazine