Ancient European Hunters Carved Human Bones Into Weapons
Scientists suggest 10,000-year-old barbed points washed up on Dutch beaches were made for cultural reasons
The Epic Failure of Thomas Edison’s Talking Doll
Expensive, heavy, non-functioning and a little scary looking, the doll created by America’s hero-inventor was a commercial flop
Top Ten Favorite Holiday Movies as Seen in American Art
What is cozier than watching old holiday movies on a chilly winter’s night? Pairing them up with favorite artworks from SAAM’s collection, that’s what
A Globe-Trotter’s Guide to Holiday Games
Staying home for Christmas and New Year’s? Try one of these festive traditions from around the world
Why Just ‘Adding Context’ to Controversial Monuments May Not Change Minds
Research shows that visitors often ignore information that conflicts with what they already believe about history
Only one is known to survive today and it is in the collections of the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum
How We Lifted Flight From Bird Evolution
The path to flight in modern birds was full of forks, twists and dead ends
How the Belief in American Exceptionalism Has Shaped the Pandemic Response
A political scientist discusses how national identity influences how the country has dealt with the Covid-19 crisis
The Top Ten Ocean Stories of 2020
From the discovery of a giant coral reef pinnacle to a shocking estimate of plastics on the seafloor, these were the biggest marine moments of the year
How Young America Came to Love Beethoven
On the 250th anniversary of the famous composer’s birth, the story of how his music first took hold across the Atlantic
A Brief History of Human Challenge Trials
For more than two centuries, scientists have been intentionally infecting patients with dangerous diseases in order to learn more
How Ancient DNA Unearths Corn’s A-Maize-ing History
New study shows how extracting whole genomes from ancient material opens the door for new research questions and breathes new life into old samples
How Denali National Park’s Sled Dogs Prepare for Winter
For nearly a century, park rangers have relied on dogsledding to patrol the public land and collect data for scientists
How PEZ Evolved From an Anti-Smoking Tool to a Beloved Collector’s Item
Early in its history, the candy company made a strategic move to find its most successful market
John le Carré, Dead at 89, Defined the Modern Spy Novel
In 25 novels, the former British intelligence officer offered a realistic alternative to Bond, using the spy genre as a vehicle for imperial critique
These Conservation Stories Prove 2020 Was Not All Bad News
From the Smithsonian’s Earth Optimism team, comes a surprising list of successful efforts making a difference
Will the Slender-Yoke Moss Be Saved?
In the crush of conservation priorities, scientists grapple with how to help an endangered species with no obvious value
What the Pandemic Christmas of 1918 Looked Like
Concerns about the safety of gift shopping, family gatherings and church services were on Americans’ minds then, too
Celebrate Jane Austen’s Birthday With a 360-Degree, Interactive Tour of Her House
The trustees of the house where Austen wrote her celebrated novels are finding ways to keep visitors happy—even amid a pandemic
The Ten Best Photography Books of 2020
From redheads to surfboards to national monuments, the subjects of our favorite titles this year are wide-ranging
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