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A powerful solution to climate change lies just beneath the surface.

To fight the bottom trawlers destroying his beloved Mediterranean Sea, an Italian fisherman realizes art can be the most powerful form of protest.

When the fish stop flourishing, a few local Scots take matters into their own hands, one seagrass bed at a time.

Ramón Navarro joins the Kawésqar community on a journey to protect their ancestral waters in Chilean Patagonia.

Struggling with a mental health crisis, one woman returns to the waters that raised her and finds healing in the ocean.

Patagonia and Pop-Up Magazine Productions present a series about knowledge.

Italian fisherman Paolo Fanciulli had tried everything to stop illegal deep-sea trawlers from harming his beloved Mediterranean ecosystem, but nothing worked. That’s when he hatched the plan to place 10-ton marble sculptures on the ocean floor.

Patagonia and Pop-Up Magazine Productions present a series about knowledge.

Molly Kawahata on climate, climbing and the fight for systemic change.

Patagonia and Pop-Up Magazine Productions present a series about knowledge.

Patagonia and Pop-Up Magazine Productions present a series about knowledge.

You’re never too old to send. A film about bikes and one bad-ass mother hucker.

Martin Johnson embarks on his most challenging run, as he explores the connection between Black British history and the River Thames.

Shawn Hayes leads a life of devotion. For him, falconry is more than a deep partnership with raptors: it’s his life’s work.

An intimate journey of three wonderful friends, Mind Over Mountain follows Canadian snow sliders Leah Evans, Marie-France Roy and Madeleine Martin-Preney on their 137 kilometers, 9.000 meters vertical Bugaboos to Rogers ski traverse.

Under the gaze of southern Arizona’s cinnamon-hued Canelo Hills, a mother passes along an ancient Puebloan tradition of natural adobe building to her three sons.

Lydia Jennings honors Indigenous scientists of the past, present and future.

Trail runner and activist Felipe Cancino takes us on a 120 km run through the Maipo River Valley—revealing along the way the impacts of the Alto Maipo hydropower project on the local ecosystem, its communities and traditions; and the threat it poses to the water supply of Santiago’s 7.1 million residents.