Why Colors You See in an Art Museum Can’t Be Replicated Today
A look into the history of the pigments used in spectacular art
The Long History of Disease and the Fear of the “Other”
Reactionary quarantines and travel bans are far older than the current Ebola scares
Ice Age Babies Surrounded by Weapon Parts Found in Alaska
Unearthed at an ancient hunting camp in Alaska, the infant remains are offering clues to the burial rites of early Americans
The Real Johnny Appleseed Brought Apples—and Booze—to the American Frontier
The apples John Chapman brought to the frontier were very different than today’s apples—and they weren’t meant to be eaten
Amazing, Rare Photographs of the Berlin Wall Coming Down
Photojournalist Alexandra Avakian traveled to Berlin based on rumor, and she ended up becoming a witness to history
The Story of the Most Successful Tunnel Escape in the History of the Berlin Wall
An abandoned bakery, some shovels and a few buckets were all it took for a few university students to defy the symbolic barrier of the Cold War
A Las Vegas Bathroom and 9 Other Unexpected Places to See the Berlin Wall
Twenty five years ago, the Berlin Wall came crumbling down. Today, segments can be found in over 140 memorials worldwide
The Forgotten History of Mace, Designed by a 29-Year-Old and Reinvented as a Police Weapon
When riots shook America, mace became a tool of crowd control instead of private protection
Past Transit Tragedies Point to a Way Forward for Virgin Galactic
From a fatal Apollo fire to the sinking of the Titanic, history has a few lessons following last week’s spaceflight disasters
This Fifth Grader Found a 14,000-Year-Old Clovis Point, Likely Unearthed From Hurricane Sandy
Noah Cordle was boogie boarding in New Jersey when he came upon an ancient hunting tool
Whigs Swigged Cider and Other Voter Indicators of the Past
Throughout most of American history, what someone wore indicated their political affiliations as loudly as a Prius or a Hummer might today
An Awe-Inspiring Altar Remembers One Latino Artist’s Guiding Spirit
At the American History Museum, an installation reimagines the life story of a Latina artist and writer
How Halloween Has Taken Over England
The British have long celebrated Guy Fawkes Day on November 5, but now the October 31 holiday is a lot more appealing.
How Witches’ Brews Helped Bring Modern Drugs to Market
Got nausea, headaches or heart trouble? You can thank medieval witches’ potions for helping to cure what ails you
No Costume? Grab A Sheet And Rock a Toga
Costume designer Mariah Hale explains how to wrap the perfect last-minute toga
What “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow” Tells Us About Contagion, Fear and Epidemics
Washington Irving fled New York because of a yellow fever epidemic. Twenty-two years later, his classic story spoke to the chaos of his youth
This Grave Atlas Shows Where to Find the Distinguished Deceased
We know where the bodies are buried … take a virtual tour of world cemeteries that host famous artists and rogues
The Doctor Who Starved Her Patients to Death
Linda Hazzard killed as many as a dozen people in the early 20th century, and they paid willingly for it
Five “Real” Sea Monsters Brought to Life by Early Naturalists
From kraken to mermaids, some monsters are real—if you know how to look for them
Women of the Early 1900s Rallied Behind Beautiful, Wartless Witches
Women looking to work, vote and marry whomever they wanted turned the Halloween icon into a powerful symbol
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