Story and video archive
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This 300-year-old farming village was abandoned in the 1960s. Now residents are moving back -
• Video 4:00Video Protecting Hong Kong’s marine life 4:00 -
• Gallery GalleryGallery Back from the brink: Golden lion tamarin -
• Video 4:01Video Predicting future climate change using ice cores 4:01 -
These ocean explorers have seen the damage done by industrial fishing. They want it to stop -
• Video 23:43Video Call to Earth: Forests of the Deep 23:43 -
This family spends months at sea exploring the deep ocean -
• Video 3:58Video Meet the school children saving Britain’s eels 3:58 -
• Video 3:12Video How Norway’s sheep herders are helping to conserve coastal heathlands 3:12 -
• Video 5:22Video Hong Kong’s hidden Hakka village 5:22 -
• Video 3:48Video Reviving ancient practices to restore the environment 3:48 -
• Video 3:50Video Santa Barbara’s Chumash people blend ancient wisdom with modern innovation 3:50 -
• Gallery GalleryGallery Schools’ artwork inspires environmental action -
Millions of ‘cloud trees’ are being planted in the Andes -
• Video 23:04Video Call to Earth: Restoring the Andes 23:04 -
• Video 4:00Video Protecting Mexico’s mountains 4:00 -
• Video 3:58Video A nature-first approach to education 3:58 -
• Video 3:50Video How school kids are helping to preserve the Seychelles 3:50 -
• Gallery GalleryGallery Przewalski’s horse: Back from the brink -
They’ve sailed across Southeast Asia for centuries. Now, these sea nomads are being forced to live on land -
• Gallery GalleryGallery Black rhino: Back from the brink -
• Video 3:57Video Saving the fastest animal in the world 3:57 -
Dreamlike image of tadpoles in a lake wins Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2024 -
The woman fighting to save the Philippines’ last rainforests -
• Video 24:02Video Call to Earth: Conservation rises 24:02 -
• Gallery GalleryGallery Northern bald ibis: Back from the brink -
Surfing penguins and hunting falcons among bird photography prize winners -
• Gallery GalleryGallery The winning images from Bird Photographer of the Year 2024 -
• Video 3:44Video Conservation comeback: how Angola revived its giant sable antelope population 3:44 -
Angola nearly lost its national animal to poaching. Here’s how a team of dedicated conservationists brought it back -
The Iberian lynx is back from the brink. Now virtual fences could save it from becoming roadkill -
Chocolate, but without the guilt? Why lab-grown cocoa and fermented fava beans could be the future



