The Challenger Disaster Put an End to NASA’s Plan to Send Civilians Into Space
On the 30th anniversary of the space shuttle tragedy, a look back at an ambitious plan to put the rest of us into orbit
As the Arctic Erodes, Archaeologists Are Racing to Protect Ancient Treasures
Once locked in frozen Alaskan dirt, Iñupiat artifacts are being lost to the sea, sometimes faster than scientists can find them
When America’s Titans of Industry and Innovation Went Road-Tripping Together
Thomas Edison, Henry Ford and their friends traveled the country in Model Ts, creating the Great American road trip in the process
The Slaves of the White House Finally Get to Have Their Stories Told
Long ignored by historians, the enslaved people of the White House are coming into focus through a new book by Jesse J. Holland
Smithsonian Journeys Travel Quarterly: India
Meet India’s Dinosaur Princess
Aaliya Sultana Babi is doing everything in her power to protect and promote India’s most significant fossil park
Smithsonian Journeys Travel Quarterly: India
The Fall and Rise of a Modern Maharaja
Born to a palace but stripped of his livelihood in the 1970s, Gaj Singh II created a new life dedicated to preserving royal Rajasthan
An Ancient, Brutal Massacre May Be the Earliest Evidence of War
Even nomadic hunter-gatherers engaged in deliberate mass killings 10,000 years ago
When Concorde First Flew, It Was a Supersonic Sight to Behold
The aircraft was a technological masterpiece, but at one ton of fuel per passenger, it had a devastating ecological footprint
Operation Desert Storm Was Not Won By Smart Weaponry Alone
Despite the “science fiction”-like technology deployed, 90 percent of ammunitions used in Desert Storm were actually “dumb weapons”
Raoul Wallenberg’s Biographer Uncovers Important Clues To What Happened in His Final Days
Swedish writer Ingrid Carlberg investigates the tragedy that befell the heroic humanitarian
The Dakota Badlands Used to Host Sabertoothed Pseudo-Cat Battles
The region was once home to a plethora of catlike creatures called nimravids, and fossils show they were an especially fractious breed
Humans Were in the Arctic 10,000 Years Earlier Than Thought
Distinctive cut marks on a Siberian mammoth represent the first known evidence of human hunters this far north
The True History of Suffragette
Emily Wilding Davison was a tireless and ingenious activist for the cause of women’s suffrage in Britain
Air Pollution Goes Back Way Further Than You Think
Thousands of years ago, humans were adding lead fumes and other pollutants to the air
Dr. Gustav Zander’s Victorian-Era Exercise Machines Made the Bowflex Look Like Child’s Play
A Smithsonian librarian highlights the precursor to today’s gym enthusiasts
Visit These Ten Sites Celebrating Major Anniversaries in 2016
From Winnie the Pooh’s 90th birthday to the National Park Service’s centennial, you won’t want to miss out on these once-in-a-lifetime events
The Iceman’s Stomach Bugs Offer Clues to Ancient Human Migration
DNA analysis of the mummy’s pathogens may reveal when and how Ötzi’s people came to the Italian Alps
The Earliest Memoir by a Black Inmate Reveals the Long Legacy of Mass Incarceration
The story of “Rob Reed” is finally published, 150 years after his release
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