Seven New Things We Learned About Human Evolution in 2021
Paleoanthropologists Briana Pobiner and Ryan McRae reveal some of the year’s best findings in human origins studies
Five Ways Humans Evolved to Be Athletes
An archaeologist explores how our prowess in sport has deep roots in evolution
Women in Science Propose Changes to Discriminatory Measures of Scientific Success
The scientists advocate shifting the current value system, which is biased against women and minorities, towards a more diverse and inclusive model
Why Do Older Individuals Have Greater Control of Their Feelings?
Psychologist Susan Turk Charles talks about findings that reveal the elderly have higher emotional well-being
14 Fun Facts About the Science of Motherhood
A short list of the amazing changes and behaviors that transform both humans and animals on the journey of motherhood
Why You Can’t Spot a Liar Just by Looking
Psychologists say you can’t confirm deception by the way a person acts—but experts are zeroing in other methods that might actually work
How Film Helps Preserve the World’s Diversity
The Smithsonian’s Human Studies Film Archive houses eight million feet of film which can help future generations reflect on the past
How the Pandemic Changed Scientific Exploration
Seven Smithsonian scientists continued to discover the secrets of the natural world safely during the pandemic
Why This Pandemic Won’t Be the Last
Smithsonian biological anthropologist Sabrina Sholts says Covid-19 illustrates that what makes us human also makes us more vulnerable to global contagions
How Darwin’s ‘Descent of Man’ Holds Up 150 Years After Publication
Questions still swirl around the author’s theories about sexual selection and the evolution of minds and morals
Why Did Ancient Indigenous Groups in Brazil Hunt Sharks?
New studies show that shark meat may have constituted half of their diet and that the beasts’ teeth were used as arrow tips and razor blades
How Dexterous Thumbs May Have Helped Shape Evolution Two Million Years Ago
Fossils and biochemical models show tool-wielding hominins used their hands like we do today
Researchers Say the Purpose of Sleep Shifts During the ‘Terrible Twos’
A multidisciplinary team offers up an exact age when REM sleep decreases
Why Black, Indigenous and Other People of Color Experience Greater Harm During the Pandemic
Scholars take a deep dive into how structural racism intersects with public health
Anthony Fauci and Alan Alda Talk Science and 26 Other Smithsonian Programs Streaming in September
This month drop in on events about global climate justice, Picasso’s ‘Guernica,’ bird brains, the Supreme Court, William Faulkner, orchids and more
Monkeys’ Attraction to Burned Grasslands May Offer Clues to Human Ancestors’ Mastery of Fire
A new study finds monkeys enter charred savannahs to avoid predators, lending support to a controversial theory about what drew hominins to blazes
Did Einstein Understand the Limitations of Testing?
Smithsonian fellow Kimberly Probolus looks into the past and future of knowledge tests
A Comet May Have Destroyed This Paleolithic Village 12,800 Years Ago
Fragments of a comet likely hit Earth 12,800 years ago, and a little Paleolithic village in Syria might have suffered the impact
Humans Have Been Taking Out Insurance Policies for at Least 30,000 Years
A study of beads made from ostrich eggshells suggests the humans of the Kalahari Desert region formed social networks to help each other
How Museums Can Help the Public Make Sense of Pandemics
We can’t let fear overrun science, says Sabrina Sholts, the Smithsonian’s curator of biological anthropology
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