
National Geographic Channel This week on Nat Geo: Lisa Ling investigates Narco State, archaeologists decode Bible relics, geologists try to predict when Mt. Vesuvius will erupt again, and a detailed look Inside the Iraq War
Source: newsletters.nationalgeographic.com
A raging drug war has turned Phoenix, Arizona into the second kidnapping capitol of the world. Nat Geo's Lisa Ling embeds with the Phoenix Police Department as they investigate the latest drug-related ...

National Geographic Channel Tonight, scientists debunk the mysteries behind human acts that seem to defy nature. Like a man who can swallow a jackhammer, or the woman who can bend her body into seemingly paralyzing positions.

National Geographic Channel Tonight on a special Locked Up Abroad: Simon was imprisoned in Peru for smuggling drugs without his knowledge. He spent years in legal limbo, sparking a Facebook phenomenon and lighting our website on fire. But now Simon is free, the show has a new ending, and he's going to be online tonight answering questions.
Source: channel.nationalgeographic.com
Simon will be online during tonight's show at 10P ET answering questions. Go to http://natgeotv.com/simon to join the conversation

National Geographic Channel When times are tough, dogs and wolves might reabsorb some fetuses in order to ensure the surviving pups have a better chance. Tonight on In the Womb: Dogs

National Geographic Channel All this month, Nat Geo is exploring the Mysteries of the Bible, from the secretive Knights Templar to the Book of Revelation.

National Geographic Channel Tonight, Nat Geo joins the Polish special police battalion BOA on a mission to arrest a suspected arms dealer with links to the Russian mafia.

National Geographic Channel This Week on Nat Geo in the U.S.: Humanly Impossible, Nazi Mystery Twins & Inside the Croc. More:
Source: newsletters.nationalgeographic.com

National Geographic Channel
Scientists estimate that the Chicxulub asteroid impact that wiped out the dinosaurs contained
7 billion times the energy of the Hiroshima bomb. Explorer: tonight at 10.
Source: channel.nationalgeographic.com
Tonight at 10P et/pt (US) The latest science examines what the world would have been like in the day after impact, and examines why some creatures survived while the majority died out.

National Geographic Channel For over 45 years, news footage and radio reports of Kennedy's assassination have quietly languished in Dallas. Now, this remarkable record has been reassembled, with the images unfolding in real time, taking you back to the fateful day.

National Geographic Channel What were the Americas like in 1491? Tonight, Nat Geo paints a picture of the New World prior to Columbus' arrival, and explores the sweeping environmental changes that took place after the arrival of European explorers.

National Geographic Channel 100 Million years ago, strange crocodiles lived alongside dinosaurs. Some galloped on land, while others were the dino-eating giants as big as T-Rex. Tonight at 9P et/pt (US)

National Geographic Channel Tonight, new analysis of a three-foot-tall stone tablet from the first century B.C. may speak of an early Messiah and his resurrection. It could rewrite the history of Christianity...if it's true.

National Geographic Channel Would it be possible to turn Mars into a habitable planet? Tonight, we'll show what it could take to "terraform" Mars from a frozen wasteland to a world of trees, water, and life.

National Geographic Channel Tonight, Dr. Bob Ballard, the man who discovered the wreck of the Titanic, dives to the ocean depths searching for warships that sank during the Battle at Gallipoli - one of the bloodiest campaigns of WWI.



















