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When the Soviet Union Chose the Wrong Side on Genetics and Evolution

Science cannot long remain unfettered in a social system which seeks to exercise control over the whole spiritual and intellectual life of a nation. The correctness of a scientific theory can never by adjudged by its readiness to give the answers desired by political leadership.--Charles A. Leone, ...
February 01, 2010 | By Sarah Zielinski

An Eclipse in Your Pocket

When you think about it, American money is kind of boring. It's fairly drab in color, and rarely have people other than U.S. presidents been found on our dollars or coins. Other countries put more interesting people, like scientists, on their money, often using a rainbow of colors. Even more daring...
January 29, 2010 | By Sarah Zielinski

Elementary School Teachers Pass on Math Fear to Girls

We know that girls can do math, and be very good at it. But a new study published this week in PNAS shows that some girls in elementary school aren't learning just how to add one plus one—they are learning that girls should be scared of those numbers. Just like their teachers.University of Chicago ...
January 26, 2010 | By Sarah Zielinski

Picture of the Week—An Ostrich

One of the oldest books about animals is the Historia animalium, by the Swiss naturalist Conrad Gesner (1516-1565). It's really a collection of five books, published from 1551 to 1558, that include animals both real and imaginary (e.g., unicorns and sea monsters). The image above is a page from vol...
January 15, 2010 | By Sarah Zielinski

Creation, a Missed Opportunity

When the movie Creation, about Charles Darwin, opened in British theaters last September, it looked as if Americans might never see the film on the big screen. It had difficulty picking up a distributor here in the United States, and there was speculation that the country might be too religious for...
January 07, 2010 | By Sarah Zielinski

Two male lions in Kenya

The Truth About Lions

The world's foremost lion expert reveals the brutal, secret world of the king of beasts
January 2010 | By Abigail Tucker

Nine Science Stories You Should Have Read This Year

It's also been a good year for science stories in Smithsonian magazine, including our special issue, Exploring the Frontiers of Science. Here are nine you should read if you haven't already:Gene Therapy in a New Light: A husband-and-wife team's experimental genetic treatment for blindness is renewi...
December 30, 2009 | By Sarah Zielinski

Science Books for Kids

For weeks, Smithsonian editor Kathleen Burke has been sifting through piles of kids' books to put together her annual list of notable books for children, now online. I dove in behind her to pull out some of the wonderful science books that I would have loved to have read when I was young:Almost Ast...
December 21, 2009 | By Sarah Zielinski

The Big Dipper's Newest Star

If you can only spot one constellation, it's probably the Big Dipper. Other than being easily recognizable, the Big Dipper is special because it contains one of the first known binary star systems. The star in the crook of the handle was found to actually be two stars around 1617 by Benedetto Caste...
December 14, 2009 | By Sarah Zielinski

The Decade's Worst Moments in Science

If yesterday had the decade's best moments, then today we have to bring you the worst (again, in ascending order):10. A cult claims they've cloned a human: Clonaid, a company with ties to the Raëlian UFO cult, announced in late December 2002 that they had successfully cloned a human woman, naming t...
December 02, 2009 | By Sarah Zielinski

A Decade of Great Moments in Science

Has it really been 10 years since we were all panicking about the Y2K bug? Yes, it's the end of another decade, and as with any good publication, we're going to overload you with lists as we pause to reflect. What's first? The 10 greatest moments in science, in ascending order:10. Hurricane Katrina...
December 01, 2009 | By Sarah Zielinski

Royal Society Puts 60 Historic Papers Online

The Royal Society, one of the world's oldest scientific societies, turns 350 next year, but the British institution is starting its birthday celebrations a little early. Today, the Society launches an interactive timeline, Trailblazing, which highlights its publishing history by making the original...
November 30, 2009 | By Sarah Zielinski

Nine Species Saved From Extinction

Last week, the U.S. government took the brown pelican (Pelecanus occidentalis) off the endangered species list. The birds' numbers had been depleted first by feather hunters and then by the pesticide DDT. But the pelicans made a comeback, starting with the 1972 ban on DDT, and now there are more th...
November 17, 2009 | By Sarah Zielinski

Why Did Darwin Neglect Dinosaurs?

November 24, 2009 will mark the 150th anniversary of the publication of Charles Darwin's On the Origin of Species, and scientists have already started the celebrations. Last week, for example, the University of Chicago hosted a series of talks by some of the top evolutionary scientists working toda...
November 05, 2009 | By Brian Switek

The Falklands Wolf: A Darwin Mystery Solved

When Charles Darwin's reached the Falkland Islands on his famed voyage, he discovered there a "large wolf-like fox" found nowhere else in the world. "As far as I am aware," he would later write in The Voyage of the Beagle, "there is no other instance, in any part of the world, of so small a mass of...
November 04, 2009 | By Sarah Zielinski

Vaccine Week: A History of Vaccine Backlash

In light of President Obama’s declaration that the outbreak of the H1N1 virus is a national emergency, Surprising Science is setting this week aside to discuss the history and science of vaccines and their importance in battling diseases, including swine flu. See Monday’s post for part 1, A Brief H...
October 28, 2009 | By Sarah Zielinski

Vaccine Week: Success Stories

In light of President Obama’s declaration of “national emergency” imposed by the outbreak of the H1N1 virus, Surprising Science is setting this week aside to discuss the history and science of vaccines and their importance in battling viruses and diseases, including swine flu. See yesterday’s post ...
October 27, 2009 | By Sarah Zielinski

The Impossibility of Avoiding Darwin on my Vacation

First of all, many thanks to Greg Laden for filling in for me on the blog for the last couple of weeks while I was away on my much-needed vacation. Where did I go? Mainly to Cambridge, England, but my travels also took me to Cardiff (in Wales), London and Paris.I went to Cambridge to visit some fri...
October 13, 2009 | By Sarah Zielinski

Medical slang

UBI in the Knife and Gun Club

The secret language of doctors and nurses
October 2009 | By Richard Conniff

The First to Reach the North Pole

It has been 100 years (and two days) since the New York Times announced that Robert E. Peary had reached the North Pole on April 16, 1909, making him the first man to do so. (News traveled much slower back then.) Of course, the Times was conveniently ignoring their rival, the New York Herald, which...
September 09, 2009 | By Sarah Zielinski


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