Latest IMAX Film Studies History of American Music
Air and Space Museum makes way for the Flying Elvi
A 21st-Century Reimagining of Norman Rockwell’s “Four Freedoms”
The iconic paintings helped the U.S. win World War II. What do they mean today?
The Navajo Nation Treaty of 1868 Lives On at the American Indian Museum
Marking a 150-year anniversary and a promise kept to return the people to their ancestral home
Were Neanderthals the Earliest Cave Artists? New Research in Spain Points to the Possibility
Archaeologists pushed back the date of cave paintings at three sites to 65,000 years ago—20,000 years before the arrival of humans in Europe
Thirty years ago, an acclaimed series of documentaries introduced the world to an isolated tribe in Papua New Guinea. What happened when the cameras left?
This Low-Cost, Graphene Device Could Help Monitor a Baby’s Health
Physicists have developed a graphene-based liquid that can sense tiny changes in breathing and heart rate
Ideas of evolution and tradition commingle in a new show at the American Indian Museum in New York City
Who Was the First First Lady to Adopt a Cause and More Questions From Our Readers
You asked, we answered
The Fantastic Beasts of John James Audubon’s Little-Known Book on Mammals
The American naturalist spent the last years of his life cataloguing America’s four-legged creatures
Dogs and Humans Didn’t Become Best Friends Overnight
First, we feared and ate them, a new isotope analysis reveals
Smithsonian’s Curator of Religion on Billy Graham’s Legacy
He was among the most influential religious leaders in U.S. history, says Peter Manseau
To Keep Up With Its Growth, Singapore Has a Grand Plan To Expand Underground
The densely populated city-state is becoming a global leader in the underground urbanism movement
Why Are These Hamsters Cannibalizing Their Young?
Scientists are stalking French cornfields to find out
The Archaeology of Wealth Inequality
Researchers trace the income gap back more than 11,000 years
A Preview of Grant Wood’s New Retrospective at the Whitney
The artist who posed as a farmer gets the star treatment at the New York museum in his biggest show ever
In Search of the Real Grant Wood
The denim-clad artist who painted American Gothic wasn’t the hayseed he’d have you believe
How Tennessee Became the Final Battleground in the Fight for Suffrage
One hundred years later, the campaign for the women’s vote has many potent similarities to the politics of today
A controversial German forester says yes, and his ideas are shaking up the scientific world
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