The nutty-flavored seeds responsible for Chia Pets provide a nutrient boost to smoothies, burgers and soups
This week, hold some creepy crawlers, look at craters on the moon and watch a film based on Joseph Conrad's first novel
A chemical analysis of early 1900s medicines, billed as cure-alls, revealed vitamins and calcium along with toxic compounds
Musical hallucinations are the rarest form of 'text hallucinations'
Specifically placed small wetlands can help capture watershed runoff, helping city planners to guard against flood disasters
Rural Czech communities in Texas have been enjoying the buttery pastry for more than a century, now homesick Texans bring kolaches to the rest of us
No Fools Need Apply to the Smithsonian's Curatorial Conference On Stuff, A Sometimes Annual Scholarly Gathering on a Subject Rarely Considered
In 1969, Internet pioneer Paul Baran predicted that specialized new media would undermine national cohesion
This year, a San Francisco-based artist will unveil 365 new paintings, reminiscent of growing bacteria, on her blog, The Daily Dish
Sears styles sprung from the ideas of European artists and couturiers
They're still a threat to bats and birds and now they even have their own "syndrome". So, are there better ways to capture the wind?
Using droplets coated in oil as "ink," a 3D printer can construct a network of synthetic cells that mimics brain and fat tissue
A learning algorithm, coupled with brain scans, was able to predict the images seen by dreamers with a 60 percent accuracy
When LucasArts was first starting out in the 1980s, the future of video games included holograms, virtual reality headsets and worldwide networking
This week, experience Japanese design, celebrate poetry with your family and learn about African Americans' roles in shaping Washington, DC's architecture
Lashed to swords and spears from the Pacific's Gilbert Islands are teeth from two shark species that were never known to have swam in the area
Around the globe, physics and astronomy labs—some on mountaintops, others underground—welcome visitors to tour the premises
The lawman had a reputation to protect—but that reputation shifted after he moved East
The vaunted Staunton Chess Set, the standard chess set you probably grew up with, has its roots in neoclassical architecture
Smithsonian historian David Ward umpires the field of poetry, honoring the boys of spring, and calls a strike
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