National Geographic under fire for posting alleged photo manipulation of the Milky Way

May 8, 2019

John Aldred

John Aldred is a photographer with over 20 years of experience in the portrait and commercial worlds. He is based in Scotland and has been an early adopter – and occasional beta tester – of almost every digital imaging technology in that time. As well as his creative visual work, John uses 3D printing, electronics and programming to create his own photography and filmmaking tools and consults for a number of brands across the industry.

National Geographic under fire for posting alleged photo manipulation of the Milky Way

May 8, 2019

John Aldred

John Aldred is a photographer with over 20 years of experience in the portrait and commercial worlds. He is based in Scotland and has been an early adopter – and occasional beta tester – of almost every digital imaging technology in that time. As well as his creative visual work, John uses 3D printing, electronics and programming to create his own photography and filmmaking tools and consults for a number of brands across the industry.

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National Geographic is facing criticism after posting an article containing a manipulated photograph by photographer Beth Moon of the Botswana night sky. It shows Baobab trees silhouetted against the Milky Way. The criticism is over the fact that the Milky Way has been quite obviously manipulated, showing several cloned areas of the Milky Way.

The article is titled “See the world’s oldest trees by starlight”, and was published on April 26th to the National Geographic website. It’s a display of pretty fantastic images from around the world with photography by Beth Moon. The write-up was by Catherine Zuckerman, Nat Geo staff writer on the science desk.

But one image, in particular, was quickly jumped on after National Geographic posted a link to the article on their Facebook page. One commenter even highlighted the duplicated areas of the Milky Way.

To make it a little clearer, here’s a closer look, showing where the same area of sky has been duplicated. Once you see it overlaid, it becomes quite obvious.

The link to the article on the Facebook page currently has over 23,000 reactions, over 7,900 shares, and over 500 comments, although not all of them are positive glowing references for the article.

In the article, there is no mention of this image being a manipulation. Most astrophotographers realise that shots like this will often be composites in order to minimise sensor noise and maximise real detail through the use of exposure stacking. This is where you create many shots of the night sky, aling them in Photoshop and then average them out to lessen the effects of high ISO sensor noise while retaining the actual night sky detail.

But that’s a very different thing to copying and pasting entire chunks from one part of the sky to another. You can see the complete article for yourself on the National Geographic website. There is a lot of pretty outstanding photography in it, to be fair. But this one definitely caught some negative attention.

You would think somebody writing for Nat Geo’s science desk would realise that this isn’t what the Milky Way actually looks like.

Should Nat Geo have declared that it was manipulated?

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John Aldred

John Aldred

John Aldred is a photographer with over 20 years of experience in the portrait and commercial worlds. He is based in Scotland and has been an early adopter – and occasional beta tester – of almost every digital imaging technology in that time. As well as his creative visual work, John uses 3D printing, electronics and programming to create his own photography and filmmaking tools and consults for a number of brands across the industry.

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32 responses to “National Geographic under fire for posting alleged photo manipulation of the Milky Way”

  1. Räymōnd Cāsilläs Avatar
    Räymōnd Cāsilläs

    Well that photo just discloses itself. If that’s the Milky Way, what angle is that supposed to be, we’re right in it. A selfie 3 trillion miles away?

    1. Carlos R Cervantes Avatar
      Carlos R Cervantes

      Poor you. We’re in it and can see it all around us; put your phone inside one of those freebies that have a hole in the middle and take a picture at slightly different angles, you’ll understand then.

    2. Duncan Knifton Avatar
      Duncan Knifton
    3. Räymōnd Cāsilläs Avatar
      Räymōnd Cāsilläs

      Somebody woke up in a trolling mood!

    4. Duncan Knifton Avatar
      Duncan Knifton

      nope…just confused on how someone can ask that question…hahahaha

    5. Räymōnd Cāsilläs Avatar
      Räymōnd Cāsilläs

      Made you reply: gotcha!
      Enjoy the rest of the post, it’s downhill from here.
      ????????

    6. Räymōnd Cāsilläs Avatar
      Räymōnd Cāsilläs
    7. Adrian J Nyaoi Avatar
      Adrian J Nyaoi

      Why do people think that NGeo. is the std for photo truthfullness. They will gladly put up fake photo with fake caption all along.

      I have seen how one famous wildlife photographer work in the field….. he had local capture the animals and put in an enclose fance for him to photograph. Call that real? I call that fake, might as well take it in the zoo.

    8. craigo Avatar
      craigo

      oh dear, there’s no helping some people’s stupidity

  2. Ron Snyder Avatar
    Ron Snyder

    I was under the impression that image manipulation was forbidden by Nat Geo

  3. Ferry Passchier Avatar
    Ferry Passchier

    Yet my photo appeared unedited* in their calendar because I enhanced the colors a bit too much for their taste (*therefore without my permission, I might add)

  4. Bastien Santucci Avatar
    Bastien Santucci

    And?

  5. David Cooper Avatar
    David Cooper

    That’s two most manipulated galactic plane I’ve seen in a while! It’s like there’s two stacked one user the other!

  6. Brian Drourr Avatar
    Brian Drourr

    Bwahaha should nat geao be allowed to judge images ever again.

  7. Frank Marin Avatar
    Frank Marin

    Disgraceful!

  8. Brian Drourr Avatar
    Brian Drourr

    Just draw a big red circle round the entire image cuz the whole thing is shit.

  9. Anthony Woodruffe Avatar
    Anthony Woodruffe

    Is Photography not about the subject? The subject is about the trees not the Milky Way.

    1. Britt Thomas Avatar
      Britt Thomas

      Anthony Woodruffe not in educational or news context when you expect the most honest forms of photography. National Geographic falls under that category for me.

    2. Andrew Dare Avatar
      Andrew Dare

      If the subject is the trees, then this is much better then – hahahahaha

  10. Jennifer Stratton Short Avatar
    Jennifer Stratton Short

    Ooops

  11. Jolyon Ralph Avatar
    Jolyon Ralph

    Come on, they are only National Geographic, not Interstellar Geographic, how could they know ? :)

  12. Charlie Muller Avatar
    Charlie Muller

    If anyone ever looks at any of the space or sky photos and never thought to think they weren’t enhanced or exposure delayed in any way- ARE FOOLED!!

  13. Alexandre Casabon Avatar
    Alexandre Casabon

    Very sad. Mostly because it is hard to notice at the speed we watch content now.

  14. Del Robertson Somerville Avatar
    Del Robertson Somerville

    All photographs are manipulated.

    1. craigo Avatar
      craigo

      fake news

  15. Tamás Székffy Avatar
    Tamás Székffy

    Search for the “Petersburger” case. This wasn’t the first. At that time, the photographer cheated. Seriously. NGS went to the extremes to cover him (János Szentpéteri, now Joe Petersburger), even after the cheat was clearly identified and there were no question about it. That was the time I cancelled my membership of NGS immediately and give all my copies (over 10 full years) as a gift.
    It’s a shame. NG(S) will never ever will be the same.
    This one… Well. There are too much stupid people out there.

  16. David Gordineer Avatar
    David Gordineer

    Meh

  17. Mahendra Bhujel Avatar
    Mahendra Bhujel

    So what ? Which photograph isn’t manipulated these days ? Are you a subscriber to the NatGeo DIYPHOTO? If not then pls STFU and let NatGeo do amazing things like they have always done.

    1. Sharon Avatar
      Sharon

      As someone else mentioned, a documentary photo in a scientific/nature
      publication is expected to be authentic (and required to be, according
      to Nat Geo’s rules). If they disclosed the ‘enhancement’ it would be
      less of an issue. Don’t try to mislead the scientific community.

  18. Scott Stevenson Avatar
    Scott Stevenson

    As a nature publication selling the world on the beauty of nature, then yes.

  19. Elizabeth Roque Avatar
    Elizabeth Roque

    Thought you couldn’t submit photos that were manipulated to them.

  20. Julie Kowald Avatar
    Julie Kowald

    And it’s a really obvious and poorly done manipulation too