Dinosaur Soft Tissue Recovered From Eight Cretaceous-Era Fossils
New sampling methods yielded cells and fibers from relatively ordinary fossils, broadening the possibilities for paleontology
What a 1950s Fashion Maven Might Teach Us About What To Wear
When it was time to suit up for work, politics or social engagements, Claire McCardell’s fans embraced her chic, but comfortable style
How Pyrex Reinvented Glass For a New Age
One hundred years after the birth of the brand, the Corning Museum of Glass pays homage to America’s favorite dish
The ‘Hellboy’ Dinosaur, a New Cousin of Triceratops, Is Fossil Royalty
The horned dinosaur wears a built-in crown and offers evidence of many more undiscovered species in North America
The Remarkable Story of the World’s Rarest Stamp
The rarely seen, one-of-a-kind 1856 British Guiana One-Cent Magenta, which recently sold for a whopping $9.5 million, gets its public debut
Ancient Urns or Drinking Vessels for Giants? Behind the Mysterious Plain of Jars in Laos
A grassy area studded with hulking, 2,000-year-old jars provides a surreal sight as well as an archeological puzzle
See All 50 States From the Air
Smithsonian Channel’s popular Aerial America series has filmed its 50th and final state
At Dockery Farms, the original bluesmen created a sound that would become legendary
Smithsonian to Receive Artifacts From Sunken 18th-Century Slave Ship
In 1794, the Portuguese slave ship São José wrecked with 400 slaves aboard; iron ballast and a wooden pulley from that ship will come to Washington, D.C.
Want to Sleep Like a King, Queen or Borgia For a Night? Stay in these Historic Airbnbs
Whether it’s the former home of a national icon or an extravagant estate in Europe, the sharing economy offers the chance to go back in time for a night
How Much U.S. History Do Americans Actually Know? Less Than You Think.
We ask David Bruce Smith, founder of the Grateful American Foundation, how we can fix this problem
Investigating the Case of the Earliest Known Murder Victim
A 430,000-year-old skull discovered in a Spanish cave bears evidence of deliberate, lethal blunt force trauma
The Classy Rise of the Trench Coat
World War I brought with it a broad array of societal changes, including men’s fashion
Step Inside a Famous Submarine
Where to visit historic subs this summer—or ride in a modern one
Researchers decipher a mystifying 15th-century document
How the Summer of Atomic Bomb Testing Turned the Bikini Into a Phenomenon
The scanty suit’s explosive start is intimately tied to the Cold War and the nuclear arms race
The Brief History of the Ferris Wheel
Originally the American answer to the Eiffel Tower, the summertime amusement became a hallmark of summer fun
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