If a Fish Could Build Its Own Home, What Would It Look Like?
By exposing fish to experimental constructions, scientists hope to find out if replicating coral reefs is really the way to go
Celebrate the Day of the Dead With Music, Butterfly Science and Other Activities
The roots of el Día de los Muertos are millennia-deep in Indigenous Mexico
14 Fun Facts About Frightening Animals
From snakes that eat their prey alive to primates that inject their peers with flesh-rotting venom, these are the scariest deeds committed by critters
Allergic Reactions to Peanuts and Tree Nuts Spike 85 Percent on Halloween
Parents and children can avoid the dangers by taking key precautions and embracing alternative activities
How Ultra-Sensitive Hearing Allows Spiders to Cast a Net on Unsuspecting Prey
Sounds trigger the ogre-faced spider to backflip and shoot a silk trap on other insects
The Intoxicating History of the Canned Cocktail
Since the 1890s, the premade cocktail has flip-flopped from novelty item to kitschy commodity—but the pandemic has sales surging
100 Years of Women at the Ballot Box
To Make Native Votes Count, Janine Windy Boy Sued the Government
‘Windy Boy v. Big Horn County’ helped ensure the Crow and Northern Cheyenne were represented, but the long struggle for Native voting rights continues
Artist Fashions Nike Air Jordan 5s From Trash
Sculptor Andy Yoder’s latest exhibition is a nod to the Great Shoe Spill of 1990 and the advances in ocean science that came from it
Make Halloween the reason to learn to love and conserve these misunderstood mammals
Why Autopsies Are Proving Crucial During Covid-19
Advances in medical imaging have reduced the need for the procedure, but it is leading to discoveries that may help with better treatments
Twelve Artworks and the Spooky Movies They Bring to Mind
Undead animals, creepy kitties, cyanotype cemeteries and other ghouls and creepy stuff to be found at the Smithsonian American Art Museum
How Fireflies’ Dramatic Light Show Might Spark Advances in Robot Communication
Researchers say understanding the brilliant display could help them create groups of drones that operate without human control
Ancient Greeks Voted to Kick Politicians Out of Athens if Enough People Didn’t Like Them
Ballots that date more than two millennia old tell the story of ostracism
Before spacecraft (and humans) set off to explore our nearest neighbor, these were some of the questions scientists were asking
How New York City Is Reclaiming Its Piers
A renaissance in pier developments is reconnecting people to the city’s waterfront
This Kentucky College Has Been Making Brooms for 100 Years
Berea College’s broomcraft program carries on an American craft tradition that’s rarely practiced today
100 Years of Women at the Ballot Box
Radical Protests Propelled the Suffrage Movement. Here’s How a New Museum Captures That History
Located on the site of a former prison, the Lucy Burns Museum shines a light on the horrific treatment endured by the jailed suffragists
Scientists Reveal What May Be the Largest Flying Bird Ever
Researchers from California and China identified the 50-million-year-old bone of a giant bird that lived in Antarctica
Decomposing Bodies in the 1720s Gave Birth to the First Vampire Panic
How superstition collided with public health concerns to create a modern monster
The Complicated Relationship Between Latinos and the Los Angeles Dodgers
A new Smithsonian book and an upcoming exhibition, ‘¡Pleibol!,’ recounts the singular importance of baseball in Latino history and culture
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