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Cocaine-Smuggling Submarines this Week on Nat Geo

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National Geographic Channel This Week (Email Newsletter)
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September 20 - 26

 Photo: Nazi Super Bombs
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Inside Cocaine Submarines
THIS SUNDAY at 9P et/pt

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National Geographic cameras take us to the front lines of the war to stem the flow of cocaine into the United States. Go inside the world of the drug cartels and explore their newest secret weapon: drug submarines. Up to 100 feet long and nearly impossible to detect, they are capable of distributing several tons of coke in just one shipment.


Read the Producer's Blog >>

 
This Week's Highlights
 Photo: Ghost Ships of the Black Sea
Ghost Ships of the Black Sea
TONIGHT at 10P et/pt
The Black Sea is a treasure trove of sunken ships lying frozen in time, and marine archaeologists have barely scratched the surface of what might be uncovered beneath its lifeless waters.
Watch a Preview >>
 Photo: Aftermath
Aftermath: World Without Oil
TUESDAY at 9P et/pt

The lifeblood of our high-tech, highly mobile world won't last forever. Nat Geo imagines what would happen if, one day, oil suddenly ran out.
Watch a Preview >>

 Photo: Journey to Shark Eden
Journey to Shark Eden
- NEW - FRIDAY at 9P et/pt
In the most comprehensive survey ever attempted, scientists study hidden coral reefs, untouched by humans, that reveal a world of abundant predators.
Watch a Preview >>
 Photo: Inside Polygamy

Inside Polygamy: Life in Bountiful

SATURDAY at 9P et/pt
Take an intimate look inside a fundamental polygamist community in Bountiful, British Columbia as it experiments with modernity.
Watch a Preview >>
Photo of the Week
 Photo: How Nero Saved Rome
How Nero Saved Rome
- NEW - TON at 9P et/pt

Nero is remembered for executing his mother and executing Christians. Nat Geo shows us a different side of this infamous ruler, a revolutionary builder who forever changed the face of Rome.
Watch a Preview >>

Also From National Geographic
 Photo: Effects of the Oil
Effects of the Oil

The Gulf of Mexico's is one of the world's most productive bodies of water in the world. But oil from the Deepwater Horizon spill has tested nature's resilience at every layer.

Click to Explore the Effects >>
 Photo: Mini T-Rexes
Mini T-Rexes?

Tyrannosaurus rex may have towered over its Cretaceous competition, but for their first 80 million years, most tyrannosaur species were small-timers—no bigger than humans, researchers say.

Read News Article >>
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Prime-Time Schedule
Mon 9/20
Tue 9/21
Wed 9/22
Thu 9/23
Fri 9/24
Sat 9/25
Sun 9/26
8P et/pt
Decoding Bible Relics
Living on the Moon
Alaska State Troopers: Alaskan Justice
Break-it-Down: Navy Tanker
Dog Whisperer Viewer's Choice
E-mail Order Bride
Explorer: Narco State
9P et/pt
How Nero Saved Rome
- NEW -
Aftermath: World Without Oil
Border Wars: Last Defense
- NEW -
How Nero Saved Rome
Journey to Shark Eden
- NEW -
Inside Polygamy: Life in Bountiful
Inside Cocaine Submarines
10P et/pt
Ghost Ships of the Black Sea
Explorer: 24 Hours After Asteroid Impact
Border Wars: Lost in the River
Naked Sci: Living on the Moon
Border Wars: Last Defense
Devil's Playground
KKK: Inside American Terror

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