Smithsonian Magazine: October 2009

October 2009 Issue Cover

Features

Prescription for Murder

In Southeast Asia, phony anti-malaria pills are linked to thousands of deaths. Now an elite team of scientists wielding cutting-edge forensic tools has put some counterfeiters behind bars
By Andrew Marshall

Trekking Hadrian's Wall

The second-century Roman fortification stretched across Britain. A hike along its remains leads to spectacular crags, idyllic villages, windswept marshes, local brews—and a renewed appreciation of Rome at the height of its power
By Andrew Curry

Teaching Cops to See

Amy Herman uses art to sharpen police officers' observation skills
By Neal Hirschfeld

Return of the Sandpiper

Years of alarming decline have finally halted for a shorebird that undertakes one of the world's longest migrations. The key? Horseshoe crabs
By Abigail Tucker

Day of Reckoning

One hundred fifty years ago, abolitionist John Brown's raid on a federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry propelled the nation closer to civil war
By Fergus M. Bordewich

Looking for Leonardo

For centuries an altar panel in Florence, Italy, has been attributed to Andrea del Verrocchio. But are two of its figures actually by his student Leonardo da Vinci?
By Ann Landi

Out of This World

In the past decade, extraordinary space missions have charted flares on the Sun, detected magnetic storms on Mercury and found volcanoes on Saturn's moons
By Laura Helmuth

Departments

From the Editor

Fevers

Temperatures at the Boiling Point
By Carey Winfrey

Indelible Images

Double Play

Baseball's Tinker, Evers and Chance were celebrated in verse—as well as in Paul Thompson's portraits
By Harry Katz

Digs

Paper Trail

In Guatemala, a chance discovery of police archives may reveal the fate of tens of thousands of people who disappeared in that country's civil war
By Julian Smith

Presence of Mind

A World Too New

The European discovery of America opened possibilities for those with eyes to see. But Columbus was not one of them
By Edmund S. Morgan

Letters

Letters

Readers Respond to the July and August Issues
By Smithsonian magazine

Wild Things

Wild Things:
Life as We Know It

Toucans, Orchids, Monkeys and more
By Amanda Bensen, Abby Callard, T.A. Frail, Ashley Luthern and Sarah Zielinski

This Month in History

October Anniversaries

Momentous or Merely Memorable
By Alison McLean

Around the Mall

Trailblazers

Xiangmei Gu once labored on a farm near Shanghai, Today, she is the Smithsonian's first and only conservator of Chinese paintings
By Abby Callard

From the Castle

From the Castle

Mind-Meld
By G. Wayne Clough

Q&A

Q and A: Mark Newport

Costume designer Mark Newport talks about knitting outfits for superheroes, both famous (Batman) and unknown (Sweaterman)
By Jordan Steffen

What's Up

What's Up

By Abby Callard

The Last Page

UBI in the Knife and Gun Club

The secret language of doctors and nurses
By Richard Conniff

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