Purrfect or A-Paw-Ling? Why ‘Cats’ Still Gives Some Theatergoers Paws
Experts disagree on the hit musical’s merits; four of the original production’s slinky, feline costumes are held by the Smithsonian
Published More Than 50 Years Ago, ‘I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings’ Launched a Revolution
Maya Angelou’s breakthrough memoir forever changed American literature and helped carve a new space for black self-expression
A WWII Airman’s Son Tracks Down His Father’s Last Mission—to Destroy a Nazi Weapon Factory
The impact of one heroic flight would take decades to reconcile
The Story of How Humans Came to the Americas Is Constantly Evolving
Surprising new clues point to the arrival taking place thousands of years earlier than previously believed
These Snow Goggles Demonstrate Thousands of Years of Indigenous Ingenuity
Made in Alaska and fashioned to protect against snow glare, the eyewear was carved from whale baleen circa 1890
The Charlatan of the Ozarks Still Looms Over the Haunted Crescent Hotel
A notorious quack peddled cures at an Arkansas resort in the 1930s. Nowadays the con game is all for show
Human Genome Recovered From 5,700-Year-Old Chewing Gum
The piece of Birch tar, found in Denmark, also contained the mouth microbes of its ancient chewer, as well as remnants of food to reveal what she ate
Is the Amazon on a Road to Ruin?
Brazil’s plan to develop a lonesome track in the heart of the rainforest poses a threat the whole world may someday have to overcome
After 90 Years, the ‘Flying Santa’ Is Still Dropping Gifts From a Plane
In New England, a long-standing tradition continues with pilots delivering gifts to lighthouses and lifesaving stations
Hitting the High Notes: A Smithsonian Year of Music
The Magnificent Musical Life of the Upside-Down Guitar Player Libba Cotten
Musician and author Laura Veirs brings this musical icon back to the stage in her recent children’s book
The Psychology Behind Generational Conflict
Older people have groused about younger people for millennia. Now we know why
Eighteen Things We’ve Learned About the Oceans in the Last Decade
In the past 10 years, the world’s oceans have faced new challenges, revealed new wonders, and provided a roadmap for future conservation
A Shopper’s Guide to Dinosaur Gifts
Tips from experts at the National Museum of Natural History to help you buy scientifically accurate dinosaur gifts for your loved one
The Smithsonian’s Ten Splashiest New Acquisitions of 2019
This year marks the arrival of a brilliant diamond, a hybrid space rocket, exciting paintings and two darling clouded leopard cubs
Miniature Brains Recently Sent Out Brain Waves for the First Time
The brain organoids, about the size of a pea, can be used to better understand neurological diseases
Here’s What 2019 Scientific Discovery Taught Us About Our Human Origins
Six studies rocked the anthropological world from a new branch of the human family to a face only an Australopithecus could love
What Elephants Teach Us About Consumption and Extinction
A new exhibition places the human-elephant relationship in the context of American history
Visit the German Castle Where DNA Was First Discovered
A museum pays tribute to Friedrich Miescher, the Swiss chemist who isolated nucleic acid in the castle’s former lab 150 years ago
Human Ancestors May Have Evolved the Physical Ability to Speak More Than 25 Million Years Ago
Though when primates developed the cognitive abilities for language remains a mystery
Ancient Whale Fossil Helps Detail How the Mammals Took From Land to Sea
A 39-million-year-old whale with floppy feet, which may not have been very good for walking, helps illuminate the massive animals’ transition to the oceans
Page 231 of 1322