Did Francis Drake Really Land in California?
New research suggests that one of the state’s greatest historians had a hand in perpetrating an infamous hoax
How Zookeepers Built Karl, the Abyssinian Ground Hornbill, a New 3-D Beak
For this species, a beak is everything and Karl has had his old one re-tooled for hunting and communication
How Tiny, Microbe-Propelled Bots Could Deliver Drugs in Our Bodies
Researchers are developing ‘hybrid biological microrobots’ to target cancer and do other work in the body
Bronze Age Baby Bottles Reveal How Some Ancient Infants Were Fed
Drinking vessels found in Bronze and Iron Age children’s graves contained proteins from animal milk
The Unforgotten: New Voices of the Holocaust
How an Astonishing Holocaust Diary Resurfaced in America
Hidden for 70 years, a new invaluable contribution to Holocaust literature—the diary of Renia Spiegel—was rediscovered inside a desk in New York
Hitting the High Notes: A Smithsonian Year of Music
How Composer John Cage Transformed the Piano—With the Help of Some Household Objects
With screws and bolts placed between its strings, the ‘prepared piano’ offers up a wide range of sounds
Using Art to Talk About the Holocaust in ‘The Evidence Room’
Museum staff discuss the reception of a difficult work that showed the vivid and painful documentation of a Nazi death camp
Want to Dig For Dinosaur Bones? Join the Pros at These Spots
These museums and companies around the country pair the public with paleontologists to uncover buried bones
Lonnie Bunch Sizes Up His Past and Future at the Smithsonian
Bunch’s new memoir details the tireless work it took to build NMAAHC and offers insights into his priorities as Smithsonian Secretary
How the ‘Blonde Rattlesnake’ Stirred Public Fascination With Female Accomplices
In 1933, Burmah White was punished harshly—and amidst a media frenzy—after she and her husband committed a spree of crimes in Los Angeles
The First Personality Test Was Developed During World War I
Long before online quizzes and Myers-Briggs, Robert Woodworth’s “Psychoneurotic Inventory” tried to assess recruits’ susceptibility to shell shock
How Charlotte Moore Sitterly Wrote The Encyclopedia of Starlight
The “world’s most honored woman astrophysicist” worked tirelessly for decades to measure the makeup of the sun and the stars
Paul Simon Has 50 Ways to Charm an Audience
As the 2019 recipient of the Smithsonian’s Great Americans Medal, the musician divulged he still has one more song to write
Could Eating Sea Urchins Help Revive Kelp Forests?
A Norwegian ‘urchin ranching’ company wants to take the echinoderms from the wild, fatten them up and sell them to restaurants
Joachim Gans, the First Practicing Jew to Set Foot in North America, Finally Gets His Due
The metallurgist came to the Roanoke settlement looking for raw materials to support the English war effort
North America Has Lost Nearly 3 Billion Birds Since 1970
The staggering population loss of 29 percent of North American birds could signal an ecological crisis
Scientists Recreate the Face of a Denisovan Using DNA
By mapping gene expressions, researchers can determine some anatomical features of our distant hominin relatives
How Lonnie Bunch Built a Museum Dream Team
An exclusive excerpt from the Smithsonian Secretary’s new book, ‘A Fool’s Errand’
In This Interactive Football League, Fans Pick the Plays
Your Call Football’s streaming app platform lets fans control the actions of real live players, earning points and winning prizes
Where Does the Word ‘Teetotaler’ Come From? And More Questions From Our Readers
You’ve got questions, we’ve got experts
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