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  1. Explore.org

    Explore.org is the world's leading philanthropic live nature cam network and documentary film channel. Our mission is to champion the selfless acts of others, create a portal into the soul of …

  2. Katmai Bear Cam - Brown Bears at Brooks Falls | Explore.org

    Watch brown bears as they fish for salmon at Brooks Falls in Katmai National Park in Alaska. This is a secondary view to Explore's live bear cam.

  3. African Animals Camera - live video from Africa | Explore.org

    For more views of the same area, check out Explore's other animal cams like our safari cam or the ones posted at the watering hole or river. What kinds of animals visit the watering hole?

  4. live cams | Explore

    Want to go behind the scenes with explore.org? Check out the podcast interview with our Founder, Charlie Annenberg Weingarten on Marketplace Weekend with host Lizzie O’Leary.

  5. About Us | Explore.org

    explore.org, the online portal for explore, is a community destination where people share thoughts, engage in dialogue, view and email films and photographs, and embed their …

  6. African River Wildlife Camera - live video from Kenya | Explore.org

    Look out for giraffes, elephants, monkeys and other African animals as they drink and take a swim in a river in Kenya.

  7. River Watch, Katmai National Park - Explore.org

    Mounted on the floating bridge over Brooks River, this live cam provides an unprecedented view of migrating salmon and brown bears "snorkeling" for them.

  8. livecams | Explore

    The colorful-billed seabirds have begun their annual return to the Gulf of Maine’s Seal Island National Wildlife Refuge to settle in for the nesting season, and now you can watch it all live on …

  9. Bears | Explore

    By Mike Fitz If you watch any of the wildlife or animal-themed cams on explore.org, then you know that they provide an exceptional lens through which we can view the lives of individual animals.

  10. A Sisterly Bond | Explore

    (Thanks to explore.org for covering the publication and open access fees.) Brown bears were characterized historically as solitary and asocial. Yet, bears are intelligent, recognize each …