Visitors to the National Geographic Museum will encounter one of the largest and most valuable collections of Anglo-Saxon gold ever found. This iPad-based installation shares the excitement of discovering such a rare treasure.

For over a decade Second Story designed and developed some of the most innovative interactive media experiences online for the National Geographic Society on diverse subject matters spanning the breadth and depth of the Society.

A Web site explores the Chesapeake Bay—important to John Smith, Powhatan, Pocahontas, and the Jamestown colonists, as well as today’s inhabitants—revealing one of America’s most renowned and vital waterways.

The simulators, 3-D models, images, animations, data, and diagrams in this Web site help audiences understand the science behind the earth’s most violent natural events.

Visitors follow Lewis and Clark on their “journey of discovery” through this Web site, which contextualizes their movement, discoveries, encounters, and documentation.

A Web site keeps visitors up-to-date on a grueling 9-month sailboat race and reveals the teams and technologies that venture around the world.

This compelling site provides unparalleled context for understanding the sequence of events, their corresponding locations, and first-person stories that defined the U.S. entrance into World War II.

The National Geography Standards come to life in diverse, eclectic galleries inside this immersive, virtual museum of fantastic interactive installations and devices.

This Web site tells the behind-the-scenes stories of capturing unforgettable National Geographic images through dispatches from photographers in the field.

A life-size king cobra is the subject and navigation device for this National Geographic online feature devoted to the deadly serpent.

This live dispatch National Geographic Web site transmitted the daily activities of several teams in New Zealand searching for the first-ever imagery of a living giant squid.

A navigable online forest challenges young National Geographic Web site visitors to explore and discover the habitats of eastern woodland animals.

This Web feature explores where dinosaur eggs are found, the technologies that reveal their species, and the methods used to accurately recreate their likeness in models.

Visitors to this National Geographic site follow a group of rafters down the Selway river to learn the ins and outs of river rafting.