George Washington Saw a Future for America: Mules
A newly minted celebrity to the world, the future president used his position to procure his preferred beast of burden from the king of Spain
How One Museum Helps the Nation Mourn
When prominent Americans like Kobe Bryant die, mourners flock to the National Portrait Gallery in search of solace
Seven Spots Where You Can See Big-Name Architecture in Small-Town America
From gas stations to public libraries, these celebrity architect-designed buildings are worth a road trip
Newly Discovered Tyrannosaur Was Key to the Rise of Giant Meat-Eaters
A partial skull found in Alberta helps put a timer on when the ‘tyrant lizards’ got big
When a Women-Led Campaign Made It Illegal to Spit in Public in New York City
While the efficacy of the spitting policy in preventing disease transmission was questionable, it helped usher in an era of modern public health laws
Nine Women Whose Remarkable Lives Deserve the Biopic Treatment
From Renaissance artists to aviation pioneers, suffragists and scientists, these women led lives destined for the silver screen
How Simple Blood Tests Could Revolutionize Cancer Treatment
The latest DNA science can match tumor types to new treatments, and soon, a blood test might be able to detect early signs of cancer
Why Mosquitoes Find Your Warm Blood So Appealing
These bloodthirsty buggers repurposed a gene normally used to sense and avoid high temperatures into a heat-seeking molecular machine
The Painstaking Art of Ice Carving
It might be cold and labor intensive, but that doesn’t stop artists from testing their ice sculpting skills at the World Ice Art Championships in Fairbanks
Twenty Smithsonian Shows to See in 2020
Women inventors, baseball stamps and a new Kusama Infinity Room are among the offerings
The Best Board Games of the Ancient World
Thousands of years before Monopoly, people were playing games like Senet, Patolli and Chaturanga
A New Experiment Hopes to Solve Quantum Mechanics’ Biggest Mystery
Physicists will try to observe quantum properties of superposition—existing in two states at once—on a larger object than ever before
Even in Death, Charles Dickens Left Behind a Riveting Tale of Deceit
New research unravels the scheme to bury the Victorian writer in Westminster Abbey—against his wishes
The Pioneering Work of Graphic Artist Herbert Bayer
The Bauhaus-trained artist revolutionized the field of graphic design, but he tarnished his legacy by working with the Nazis
A New Book About George Washington Breaks All the Rules on How to Write About George Washington
Alexis Coe’s cheeky biography of the first president pulls no punches
Can Disease-Sniffing Dogs Save the World’s Citrus?
Once trained, canines can detect citrus greening disease earlier and more accurately than current diagnostics
New Generation of Dark Matter Experiments Gear Up to Search for Elusive Particle
Deep underground, in abandoned gold and nickel mines, vats of liquid xenon and silicon germanium crystals will be tuned to detect invisible matter
The Must-See Outdoor Art Installations of 2020
Janet Echelman, Yayoi Kusama and Dale Chihuly are just a few of the artists making massive sculptures for the year ahead
New Book Draws Inspiration From Life Stories of African American Women
In “Brave. Black. First.,” meet more than 50 African American women who changed the world
The History of Wives Replacing Their Dead Husbands in Congress
This tradition was one of the main ways American women gained access to political power in the 20th century
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