The Alps’ magical ice caves are at risk in our warming world. For centuries, this spectacular underworld recorded the local climate. Now its fairy-tale features are receding, drip by drip.
The opening spread shows the gatefold closed (the left flap over the three-panel photo). Another three-panel photo is on the second spread.
The second-to-last spread is another gatefold, showing a photo of the modern cave with light shing through a hola. eA photo of the cave from 1845 is on the flap on the previous spread. You can also see the hole in the cave in that photo.
Getting to zero carbon emissions won’t save the world. Putting carbon back where we found it could be another weapon to fight climate change. But it’s a massive undertaking unlike anything we’ve ever done.
We used a fading headline to illustrate the carbon disappearing.
The graphic in the middle of the story is a double gate, with two flaps over the four-panel graphic. The graphic shows how the carbon can go back into the ground or into the ocean
The gut microbiome can impact your digestion, immune system, and even your mood. We chose to use type bouncing around the page to show how the microbiomes react. Photographer Martin Oeggerli added color to the photos to discrimate between types of microbes and their features.
We matched photos of endangered animals from Joel Sartore’s massive Photo Ark collection with other animals within their web. This was done to showcase how after 50 years the Endangered Species Act not only protects individual plants and animals but the creatures with whom their lives are intertwined.
The robot revolution has arrived. Machines now preform all sorts of tasks: They clean big stores, patrol borders and help children with autism. But will they improve our lives?
We chose to use Foundry Gridnik, the font also used for the movie ‘Ex Machina,’ to tell the story of machines who are taking over more duties long preformed by humans and how it’s changing how we live.
Gunung Palung began as a remote Indonesian forest reserve. Today it’s grown into a sprawling national park that protects some of the world’s most biodiverse rainforests and the creatures that call them home.
We chose to have the headline covered by the tree. Having the tree stand out helps show the diversity of the Borneo rainforest.
Beneath Borneo’s rainforest, explorers search for new discoveries deep within some of the Earth’s largest, longest, and wildest caves.
The headline at different levels in the cave helps draw the eye to all the unique elements inside the cave.
A biologist's unusual “fish bunker” of preserved aquatic life shows how humanity has pushed some species to their doom.
We used a structured layout with reverse lines to give each piece a type a fixed location.