Dire Wolves Explained
Watch National Geographic Dire Wolves Explained! Dire wolves prowled the Earth around 300,000 years ago, but thanks to fossil records—and Game of Thrones—their legend lives on.
Domesticated Dogs From Gray Wolves
Man's best friends may have started off as European gray wolves, according to scientists whose research is challenging earlier thinking around where and why dogs became domestic animals.
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View more detailsSwimming Wolves
Meet the Rare Swimming Wolves That Eat Seafood. Unlike their interior cousins, coastal wolves of Vancouver Island live with two paws in the ocean and two paws on land.
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View more detailsSparring Wolves
A very large juvenile male (white) challenges the alpha male (gray) for control of the wolf pack. Although it faced a formidable challenger, the alpha prevailed … for now This photo and caption were submitted to Your Shot.
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View more detailsWild Wolves of Yellowstone
Hear photographer Ronan Donovan describe the challenge of photographing one of Yellowstone National Park's most elusive and iconic species: wolves.
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View more detailsGray Wolves Minnesota
This Month in Photo of the Day: From the National Geographic DVD Deadly Instinct.
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View more detailsWolves Crossword Puzzle
Solve This Wolves Crossword Puzzle See if you can decipher the clues and show off what you know about wolves.
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View more detailsWolves 101
With their piercing looks and spine-tingling howls, wolves inspire both adoration and controversy around the world. Find out how many wolf species exist, the characteristics that make each wolf's howl unique, and how the wolf population in the continental United States nearly became extinct.
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View more detailsKilling Wolves
Why Killing Wolves Might Not Save Livestock. New study fuels debate over how to reduce attacks on cows and sheep.
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View more detailsWolves Of Isle Royale
Should We Save the Wolves of Isle Royale? As the predators dwindle, experts debate whether to intervene.
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View more detailsRare Wolves
These rare wolves are unique species. Here’s why that matters. Mexican gray wolves and red wolves are taxonomically unique, a federal report says, and require protection under the Endangered Species Act.
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View more detailsChernobyl Wolves
A new study raises the possibility that Chernobyl's wolves could spread radiation-caused mutations to other European wolf populations.
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View more detailsTimberwolves
This photo and caption were submitted to Your Shot. The secret behaviors of the timber wolves revealed in this photograph ascribe almost human attributes within the realm of affection and offerings of familial respect.
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View more detailsCrying Wolves
This photo was submitted to Your Shot "Wolves are especially hard to photograph in the wild," writes Petra Warner, a member of National Geographic.
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View more detailsGame Of Throne Wolves
Animals don’t just appear on the massively popular fantasy show Game of Thrones—they announce themselves, hitting the screen as larger-than-life, CGI-generated (or CGI-enhanced) fantastical beasts like dragons and dire wolves.
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View more detailsWhite Wolves Your Shot
This photo was submitted to Your Shot. A pack of arctic wolves strolls by on the Arctic Bay in Nunavut, Canada. It's hard for scientists to spend time studying the animals, as temperatures in their climate can get down to −63 °F.
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View more detailsDomesticated Dogs From Gray Wolves
Man's best friends may have started off as European gray wolves, according to scientists whose research is challenging earlier thinking around where and why dogs became domestic animals.
Product Details
View more detailsSwimming Wolves
Meet the Rare Swimming Wolves That Eat Seafood. Unlike their interior cousins, coastal wolves of Vancouver Island live with two paws in the ocean and two paws on land.
Product Details
View more detailsSparring Wolves
A very large juvenile male (white) challenges the alpha male (gray) for control of the wolf pack. Although it faced a formidable challenger, the alpha prevailed … for now This photo and caption were submitted to Your Shot.
Product Details
View more detailsWild Wolves of Yellowstone
Hear photographer Ronan Donovan describe the challenge of photographing one of Yellowstone National Park's most elusive and iconic species: wolves.
Product Details
View more detailsGray Wolves Minnesota
This Month in Photo of the Day: From the National Geographic DVD Deadly Instinct.
Product Details
View more detailsWolves Crossword Puzzle
Solve This Wolves Crossword Puzzle See if you can decipher the clues and show off what you know about wolves.
Product Details
View more detailsWolves 101
With their piercing looks and spine-tingling howls, wolves inspire both adoration and controversy around the world. Find out how many wolf species exist, the characteristics that make each wolf's howl unique, and how the wolf population in the continental United States nearly became extinct.
Product Details
View more detailsKilling Wolves
Why Killing Wolves Might Not Save Livestock. New study fuels debate over how to reduce attacks on cows and sheep.
Product Details
View more detailsWolves Of Isle Royale
Should We Save the Wolves of Isle Royale? As the predators dwindle, experts debate whether to intervene.
Product Details
View more detailsRare Wolves
These rare wolves are unique species. Here’s why that matters. Mexican gray wolves and red wolves are taxonomically unique, a federal report says, and require protection under the Endangered Species Act.
Product Details
View more detailsChernobyl Wolves
A new study raises the possibility that Chernobyl's wolves could spread radiation-caused mutations to other European wolf populations.
Product Details
View more detailsTimberwolves
This photo and caption were submitted to Your Shot. The secret behaviors of the timber wolves revealed in this photograph ascribe almost human attributes within the realm of affection and offerings of familial respect.
Product Details
View more detailsCrying Wolves
This photo was submitted to Your Shot "Wolves are especially hard to photograph in the wild," writes Petra Warner, a member of National Geographic.
Product Details
View more detailsGame Of Throne Wolves
Animals don’t just appear on the massively popular fantasy show Game of Thrones—they announce themselves, hitting the screen as larger-than-life, CGI-generated (or CGI-enhanced) fantastical beasts like dragons and dire wolves.
Product Details
View more detailsWhite Wolves Your Shot
This photo was submitted to Your Shot. A pack of arctic wolves strolls by on the Arctic Bay in Nunavut, Canada. It's hard for scientists to spend time studying the animals, as temperatures in their climate can get down to −63 °F.