National Geographic features best photographs of the decade

Of over 21.6 million published photos in 10 years, these were the best.

December 31, 2019, 8:09 AM

As the 2010s draw to a close, National Geographic has shared a look back at the most powerful photos of the decade.

Of the 21,613,329 captivating and powerful images published throughout the last 10 years by National Geographic for print and digital platforms, here are a handful of the top selections that prove a picture is worth a 1,000 words.

In Labor on the Road, photography by Lynsey Addario

Pregnant Noor Nisa, in labor, is assisted by her mother after her car broke down on the way to the hospital in Afghanistan.
Lynsey Addario/National Geographic

Pregnant Noor Nisa, in labor, is assisted by her mother after her car broke down on the way to the hospital in Afghanistan.People Hoping for Mobile Signal in Djibouti, photography by John Stanmeyer

PHOTO: Impoverished African migrants crowd the night shore of Djibouti city, trying to capture inexpensive cell signals from neighboring Somalia—a tenuous link to relatives abroad.
Impoverished African migrants crowd the night shore of Djibouti city, trying to capture inexpensive cell signals from neighboring Somalia—a tenuous link to relatives abroad. For more than 60,000 years our species has been relying on such intimate social connections to spread across the Earth.
John Stanmeyer/National Geographic

Impoverished African migrants crowd the night shore of Djibouti city, trying to capture inexpensive cell signals from neighboring Somalia—a tenuous link to relatives abroad. For more than 60,000 years our species has been relying on such intimate social connections to spread across the Earth.Ghost Cats, photography by Steve Winter

PHOTO: Hollywood's most reclusive star, cougar P22, was first seen in Griffith Park in Los Angeles almost two years ago.
Hollywood's most reclusive star, cougar P22, was first seen in Griffith Park in Los Angeles almost two years ago. A radio collar tracks his moves, but residents see scant sign of him.
Steve Winter/National Geographic

Hollywood's most reclusive star, cougar P22, was first seen in Griffith Park in Los Angeles almost two years ago. A radio collar tracks his moves, but residents see scant sign of him.Alex Honnold Free-Solo Ascent, photography by Jimmy Chin

PHOTO: With California's Yosemite Valley far beneath him, Alex Honnold free solos—which means climbing without ropes or safety gear—up a crack on the 3,000-foot southwest face of El Capitan.
With California's Yosemite Valley far beneath him, Alex Honnold free solos—which means climbing without ropes or safety gear—up a crack on the 3,000-foot southwest face of El Capitan. Before he accomplished the feat on June 3, 2017, Honnold spent nearly a decade thinking about the climb and more than a year and a half planning and training for it.
(Jimmy Chin/National Geographic

With California's Yosemite Valley far beneath him, Alex Honnold free solos, which means climbing without ropes or safety gear, up a crack on the 3,000-foot southwest face of El Capitan.Final Ear Rub for Northern White Rhino Named Sudan, photography by Ami Vitale

A wildlife ranger comforts Sudan, the last male Northern White Rhino on the planet moments before he passed away.
Ami Vitale/National Geographic

A wildlife ranger comforts Sudan, the last male Northern White Rhino on the planet moments before he passed away.

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