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Draft:Out of Eden Walk

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Out of Eden Walk
Type of projectJournalism project
FounderPaul Salopek
Key contributors
LaunchedJanuary 2013; 13 years ago (January 2013)
StatusActive
Websiteoutofedenwalk.org

The Out of Eden Walk is a long-form journalism project led by American journalist Paul Salopek, who began walking in 2013 along a route approximating the early human migration out of Africa. The project is managed by an independent nonprofit organization and supported by the National Geographic Society. The combines travel writing, photography, audio, video, and mapping to document contemporary life along the journey.

Background

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The project was created by Paul Salopek as an experiment in "slow journalism", which would use walking as a method for reporting on different communities and landscapes at human scale, while following one of the broad migration routes associated Out of Africa theory.[1][2] The project was originally planned as a seven-year trek from Africa's Rift Valley to Tierra del Fuego,[3][4] but due to delays and other factors has continued beyond its initial schedule.[5][6]

A recurring feature of the project is the "milestone" in which a standardized record made at regular intervals along the route. These milestones include observations of landscape, sound, people, and other details from the walk.[7] The project publishes written dispatches, photographs, audio recordings, videos, and map-based stories through the National Geographic Society's Out of Eden Walk platform.[8][9]

Route

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The walk began at Herto Bouri, Ethiopia, in the Afar region near the Great Rift Valley.[10][11] The first chapter, "Out of Africa", covered Ethiopia, Djibouti, and a Red Sea crossing between January and May 2013.[8] The project has organized the route into chapters including "Out of Africa", "Holy Lands", "Autumn Wars", "Silk Road", "Riverlands", "Middle Kingdom", "Asian Rim", "Ocean Crossing", and "Americas".[8]

In a 2019 essay for The New Yorker, Salopek wrote that the route was intended to follow archaeological and genetic evidence for ancient human migration as closely as modern borders, wars, and practical conditions allowed.[6] By that time, he had walked from Ethiopia through regions including Saudi Arabia, the Levant, Afghanistan, and India, and planned to continue across China and toward Alaska before proceeding down the Americas.[6]

Salopek in rural China
Salopek in Beijing

The walk was disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic, with Salopek having paused in Myanmar.[12] He resumed the route in China in October 2021 after a quarantine in Shanghai. In April 2023, while Salopek was in China, PBS NewsHour described him as halfway through the journey.[13]

By January 2025, Salopek reached the Pacific rim, and wrote that he hoped to board a cargo ship from Japan to Alaska that spring.[14] He crossed the North Pacific by container ship in 2025, with a November 2025 dispatch describing the crossing as the project's "Ocean Crossing" chapter.[15]

In October 2025, National Geographic announced that the project had entered North America, beginning a new phase of the journey in Alaska.[16] In January 2026, Salopek published a dispatch from Anchorage, Alaska.[17]

Educational use and organization

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The Out of Eden Walk has been used as an educational resource by National Geographic Education and the Pulitzer Center.[1][18] National Geographic Education describes the project as a resource for subjects including anthropology, genetics, geography, human geography, social studies, storytelling, and geographic information systems.[1] The Pulitzer Center, an education partner of the project, has promoted the walk as a tool for teaching about migration and global storytelling.[18]

The Out of Eden Walk is also associated with an independent nonprofit organization, Out of Eden Walk, which describes itself as a 501(c)(3) organization supporting Salopek's journey and related educational work.[9][19]

References

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  1. ^ a b c "Out of Eden Walk". National Geographic Education. Retrieved May 12, 2026.
  2. ^ Muzaffar, Maroosha (May 18, 2018). "'Slow Journalist' Paul Salopek Is in India on His Epic 10-Year Walk Across Continents". VICE. Retrieved May 12, 2026.
  3. ^ "Paul Salopek is on a foot journey across the world. He provides an extraordinary record of humanity at a new millennium". National Geographic. January 10, 2025. Retrieved May 12, 2026.
  4. ^ NPR Staff (January 10, 2013). "What Do You Pack For A Seven-Year Trip?". NPR. Retrieved May 12, 2026.
  5. ^ Salopek, Paul (December 2013). "To walk the world: part one". National Geographic. Retrieved May 12, 2026.
  6. ^ a b c Salopek, Paul (September 16, 2019). "A Twenty-Four-Thousand-Mile Walk Across Human History". The New Yorker. Retrieved May 12, 2026.
  7. ^ Salopek, Paul (October 2015). "New Milestone, East to China". Out of Eden Walk. National Geographic Society. Retrieved May 12, 2026.
  8. ^ a b c "Out of Eden Walk". Out of Eden Walk. National Geographic Society. Retrieved May 12, 2026.
  9. ^ a b "Out of Eden Walk". Out of Eden Walk Nonprofit. Retrieved May 12, 2026.
  10. ^ Salopek, Paul (January 24, 2013). "Baby Steps". Out of Eden Walk. National Geographic Society. Retrieved May 12, 2026.
  11. ^ "Travel Pioneers: Paul Salopek". BBC Travel. March 2015. Retrieved May 12, 2026.
  12. ^ Salopek, Paul (October 13, 2021). "Crossroad of Memory". Out of Eden Walk. National Geographic Society. Retrieved May 12, 2026.
  13. ^ "Explorer halfway through journey to walk around the world". PBS NewsHour. April 14, 2023. Retrieved May 12, 2026.
  14. ^ Salopek, Paul (January 16, 2025). "Bookend Oceans". Out of Eden Walk. National Geographic Society. Retrieved May 12, 2026.
  15. ^ Salopek, Paul (November 24, 2025). "Blue Highway". Out of Eden Walk. National Geographic Society. Retrieved May 12, 2026.
  16. ^ "Out of Eden Walk Global Storytelling Journey Arrives in North America". National Geographic Society. October 20, 2025. Retrieved May 12, 2026.
  17. ^ Salopek, Paul (January 8, 2026). "Reading Anchorage". Out of Eden Walk. National Geographic Society. Retrieved May 12, 2026.
  18. ^ a b "Out of Eden Walk: An Introduction for Educators". Pulitzer Center. September 4, 2015. Retrieved May 12, 2026.
  19. ^ "Out Of Eden Walk". ProPublica. April 20, 2026. Retrieved May 12, 2026.