A Deep Dive Into the Skeleton of the Oldest-Known Modern Bird
A fossil found in China may offer new clues about avian evolution
Photos From the Heart of the Ferguson Protests
The events sparked by the killing of young Michael Brown gave rise to a new civil rights movement that’s still growing
The Fall and Rise and Fall of Pompeii
The famous archaeological treasure is falling into scandalous decline, even as its sister city Herculaneum is rising from the ashes
The author helped create a library in the last town he called home—and it’s full of great summer reading suggestions
What Makes the Orange Juice Can Worthy of Display in a Museum
A new exhibition explains why the everyday objects of today and the recent past are so important to understanding who we are
Smithsonian Journeys Travel Quarterly: Inca Road
How the Inca Empire Engineered a Road Across Some of the World’s Most Extreme Terrain
For a new exhibition, a Smithsonian curator conducted oral histories with contemporary indigenous cultures to recover lost Inca traditions
The Foods Americans Once Loved to Eat
Turtles, beavers and eel were once beloved staples of the continental diet. What happened?
Ride America’s Most Historic Roller Coasters
This summer, ride the coasters that add history to their thrills
Genome Analysis Links Kennewick Man to Native Americans
Ancient DNA sequenced from the skeleton adds to the controversy over the individual’s ancestry
Six Ways the Civil War Changed American Medicine
150 years ago, the historic conflict forced doctors to get creative and to reframe the way they thought about medicine
A New Recreation Shows How Ancient Romans Lifted Wild Animals Into the Colosseum
An elaborate system of elevators and trap doors lifted ferocious beasts onto the Colosseum floor
The Most Loved and Hated Novel About World War I
An international bestseller, Erich Maria Remarque’s All Quiet on the Western Front was banned and burned in Nazi Germany
The American at the Battle of Waterloo
The British remember William Howe De Lancey, an American friend to the Duke of Wellington, as a hero for the role he played in the 1815 clash
Americans Are Not the Only Ones Obsessed With Their Flag
From the mild-mannered Danes to crazed soccer fans, people all over the world go nuts for their national colors
In a world before the printing press, how did news of the famous document make the rounds?
Relive the Battle of Waterloo With These Astonishing Portraits of War Reenactors
Photographer Sam Faulkner shoots a portrait series that gives a face to the more than 200,000 soldiers who fought in the historic conflict
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