What to Expect When Ingenuity Takes Flight This Week on Mars
Nicknamed ‘Ginny,’ the Mars helicopter is set to take off from the surface of the Red Planet no earlier than April 14
How to Germinate Seeds for Your Garden Using an Instant Pot
Hack your way to planting success with the popular kitchen appliance
Black Protesters Have Been Rallying Against Confederate Statues for Generations
When Tuskegee student Sammy Younge, Jr., was murdered in 1966, his classmates focused their righteous anger on a local monument
The Next Step in Covid-19 Vaccines May Be Through the Nose
Intranasal vaccines may help prevent transmission and hinder the evolution of new viral variants
Celebrate National Library Week With Bibliophilic Backgrounds for Your Virtual Meetings
Smithsonian Libraries and Archives offers book lovers these nine stylish backdrops
How the Arts Have Inspired Social Change
Americans have a long tradition of inspiring and elevating movements for change using benefit concerts, song and other artistic traditions
The Day Soviet Aircraft Attacked American Pilots
On that April ‘Black Thursday’ 70 years ago, the air war over Korea changed as the Allies scrambled to counter the superior MiG-15 jet fighter
How Museum Collections Advance Knowledge of Human Health
Surprisingly, mosquitoes, leeches, parasites, birds and minerals can be important sources for research to fight cancer and prevent disease
Follow Dante’s Footsteps Through Italy
For the 700th anniversary of the poet’s death, visit his birthplace, churches and tomb
Some of Europe’s Oldest-Known Modern Humans Are Distantly Related to Native Americans
Genome sequencing shows some individuals share family ties with surprising populations, and all boast plenty of Neanderthal relatives
Watch How Zookeepers Give Animals Their Meds
It takes more than just a spoonful of sugar to entice compliance from geckos, red pandas, kiwis and monkeys
Gender-Inclusive Language Puts an End to the Era of ‘Manned’ Spaceflight
It is time to honor six decades of women’s contributions to spaceflight, says the Air and Space Museum, with unbiased verbs like ‘crewed’ or ‘piloted’
Drones Are Delivering Covid-19 Vaccines to Underserved Communities
The company Zipline is using the technology to provide medical resources to rural areas in markets around the world
Why Are Scientists Studying Coral’s Smell?
Gassy chemicals may tell tales of coral health and climate change
A new tome takes readers into collector Edward Brooke-Hitching’s “madman’s library”
Did Shakespeare Base His Masterpieces on Works by an Obscure Elizabethan Playwright?
The new book “North by Shakespeare” examines the link between the Bard of Avon and Sir Thomas North
Why These Five Women Changemakers in American Art Deserve Reconsideration
A rising scholar of equality issues in American Art dives into the Smithsonian collections to find dynamic stories for her upcoming webcomic series
The Thorny Politics of Presidential Portraiture
In a new podcast, the National Portrait Gallery reveals that a portrait is being commissioned of the former president
Listening to Nature Gives You a Real Rocky Mountain High
Sounds like birdsong and flowing water may alleviate stress, help lower blood pressure and lead to feelings of tranquility
This London Building Tells the Story of a Century’s Worth of Disease and Epidemics
In the borough of Hackney, a ‘disinfecting station’ ostensibly kept the public safe from the spread of infectious illness
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