“Afghan Girl” by Steve McCurry. Credit: National Geographic

 

Over the last 125 years National Geographic has been host to some of the most iconic images ever taken, and now the magazine is honoring its most celebrated shots with an issue devoted entirely to them.

The October 2013 issue will feature instantly recognizable photographs from the magazine’s past — including National Geographic’s most famous image, Steve McCurry’s “Afghan Girl.”

The issue also includes a stirring essay from writer and photographer Robert Draper.

“Today photography has become a global cacophony of freeze-frames. Millions of pictures are uploaded every minute,” Draper writes.

“Correspondingly, everyone is a subject, and knows it — any day now we will be adding the unguarded moment to the endangered species list. It’s on this hyper-egalitarian, quasi-Orwellian, all-too-camera-ready ‘terra infirma’ that National Geographic’s photographers continue to stand out.”

Here’s to hoping Nat Geo’s photographers stand out for a long time to come. Check out a few more of the magazine’s most famous images below.

 

Photo by Steve McCurry, 1991 | Kuwait Under the black clouds of burning oil fields during the Gulf War, camels forage desperately for shrubs and water in southern Kuwait. Front-line photographs of regions ravaged by human strife can also illuminate war’s environmental cost.

Photo by Steve McCurry, 1991 | Kuwait. Under the black clouds of burning oil fields during the Gulf War, camels forage desperately for shrubs and water in southern Kuwait. Front-line photographs of regions ravaged by human strife can also illuminate war’s environmental cost.

 

Photo by Paul Nicklen 2004 | Canada Its image mirrored in icy water, a polar bear travels submerged—a tactic often used to surprise prey. Scientists fear global warming could drive bears to extinction sometime this century.

Photo by Paul Nicklen, 2004 | Canada. Its image mirrored in icy water, a polar bear travels submerged—a tactic often used to surprise prey. Scientists fear global warming could drive bears to extinction sometime this century.

 

Photo by Luis Marden Texas | 1939 A cowgirl dropped a nickel in a parking meter to hitch her pony. When this photo was taken El Paso was still a highly horse-conscious town wiht many cattle-ranch residents.

Photo by Luis Marden, Texas | 1939. A cowgirl dropped a nickel in a parking meter to hitch her pony. When this photo was taken El Paso was still a highly horse-conscious town with many cattle-ranch residents.

 

Paul Nicklen/National Geographic. Nicklen: "I expected this leopard seal to flee with her catch, a live penguin chick, but she dropped it on my camera." (Antarctica, 2006)

Paul Nicklen/National Geographic. Nicklen: “I expected this leopard seal to flee with her catch, a live penguin chick, but she dropped it on my camera.” (Antarctica, 2006)

 

Photo by John Stanmeyer/National Geographic2010  | Dzitnup, MexicoA single frame can transport us to one of our planet’s far-flung and beautiful places. In this one, stalactites and a sunbeam spotlight a swimmer in the Xkeken cenote, a natural well in the Yucatán thought by the Maya to lead to the underworld

Photo by John Stanmeyer/National Geographic, 2010 | Dzitnup, Mexico. A single frame can transport us to one of our planet’s far-flung and beautiful places. In this one, stalactites and a sunbeam spotlight a swimmer in the Xkeken cenote, a natural well in the Yucatán thought by the Maya to lead to the underworld