How to Care for Komodo Dragons, the World’s Largest Lizards
The Smithsonian’s National Zoo is warming up to a new monitor lizard this winter, a young Komodo dragon named Onyx
How Dexterous Thumbs May Have Helped Shape Evolution Two Million Years Ago
Fossils and biochemical models show tool-wielding hominins used their hands like we do today
Can Smartwatches Be Adapted to Help Detect Covid-19 Infections?
With new algorithms, wearable devices—collecting vital signs like heart rate and skin temperature—could catch illness early
Curators Weigh In on the Making of the Landmark Exhibition ‘Printing the Revolution!’
Exploring the origins of the exhibition that combines innovative printmaking practices with social justice
The 1950s TV Show That Set the Stage for Today’s Distance Learning
“Sunrise Semester” gave a generation of women a second chance at higher education
How Arctic Anthropologists Are Expanding Narratives About the North
Studying past Arctic cultures and working with today’s northern communities to address present-day socioeconomic and environmental challenges
With This New Digital Telescope Tool, Anyone Can Access the Heavens
This freely available technology tool provides a unique learning experience for budding astronomers and artists alike
These Are the Highest-Resolution Photos Ever Taken of Snowflakes
Photographer and scientist Nathan Myhrvold has developed a camera that captures snowflakes at a microscopic level never seen before
How the Pandemic Is Undermining Weather Monitoring
Scientists are scrambling to patch the cracks forming in the global marine weather monitoring system
Their Doors May Be Closed, but Embassies Are Still Showing People the World
From cooking demonstrations to poetry readings to special exhibitions, exploring another country has never been easier
History Shows Americans Have Always Been Wary of Vaccines
Even so, many diseases have been tamed. Will Covid-19 be next?
A Curator Decodes the Powerful Messaging in This Landscape Painting
Curator Eleanor Harvey shares the story of Robert Duncanson and his artwork
The Extraordinary Disappearing Act of a Novelist Banned by the Nazis
Driven into exile because of her work’s “anti-German” themes, Irmgard Keun took her own life—or did she?
Meet the Soil Scientists Using Dirt to Make Stunning Paints
Professors in California and Wyoming use the unique palettes to teach geology
A Scholar Takes a Deep Dive Into a Painted Homage to Abraham Lincoln
U.S. artist George Peter Alexander Healy’s presidential portraiture, conceived years after the sitter passed away
Ancient South American Civilizations Bloomed in the Desert Thanks to Seabird Poop
Prehistoric farmers fertilized their crops with the waste, which they imported from the coast
Archaeologists Identify Famed Fort Where Indigenous Tlingits Fought Russian Forces
The new discovery builds upon the knowledge passed down by generations of Indigenous communities about the clash from two centuries ago
How the Rugged F4F Wildcat Held the Line During World War II
Designed by Grumman Iron Works, the tough little fighter kept America in the fight during those early dark days in the Pacific Theater
Could Indoor Vertical Farms Feed Livestock?
The people at Grōv Technologies think farmers can produce wheatgrass for their herds with less land and water using the method
The Rise and Fall of America’s Lesbian Bars
Only 15 nightlife spaces dedicated to queer and gay women remain in the United States
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