How to Save Your Election Day Newspaper
Here’s what you need to know to preserve your copy of history
A Miniature Living Redwood Forest Springs Up In Brooklyn
Artist Spencer Finch explores landscape by building a tiny, scale replica of a California grove
Deep in the Heart of Iceland, There’s a New Way to Tap the Earth’s Energy
The Iceland Deep Drilling Project has extended a borehole thousands of meters deep to produce geothermal power at a scale never before seen
Did You Know That the Designs On Some White House China Are Patented?
Two, possibly three, of the 19 china services that have been made for 17 U.S. presidents are covered by design patents
Most Ivory for Sale Comes From Recently Killed Elephants—Suggesting Poaching Is Taking Its Toll
Carbon dating finds that almost all trafficked ivory comes from animals killed less than three years before their tusks hit the market
Smithsonian Journeys Travel Quarterly: Cuba
A Photojournalist Captures Dramatic Portraits of Dancers in the Streets of Cuba
For Gabriel Davalos, photography is about storytelling
Extinction or Evolution? The Answer Isn’t Always Clear
The same factors that kill off some species cause others to evolve at lightning speed
Everyone Poops. Some Animals Eat It. Why?
Consuming feces can benefit not only the health and microbiomes of some animals, but also their environments
What’s Next for Solar Energy? How About Space
Scientists are closer than ever to making the far-out concept of a space-based solar collection system a reality
Smoking a Pack a Day for a Year Leaves 150 Mutations in Every Lung Cell
Researchers quantify just how bad smoking is for you, molecularly
If Only Ernie Had Seen It. Here’s Why “Mr. Cub” Is Part of the 2016 World Series Win
From Smithsonian Books, a treasure of baseball history for those who can’t wait for spring training
Smithsonian Journeys Travel Quarterly: Cuba
The Story Behind Che’s Iconic Photo
Fashion photographer Alberto Korda took Che Guevara’s pictures hundreds of times in the 1960s. One stuck
This Spike-Crested Lizard Drinks From Sand With Its Skin
The thirsty, thorny devils of Australia’s deserts can’t quench their thirst with tongues alone
Step Inside Cuba’s Oldest Printmaking Studio
At the Taller Experimental de Gráfica in Havana, process is everything
Why Anaerobic Digestion Is Becoming the Next Big Renewable Energy Source
A food-to-electricity plant in England is just one in a string of local efforts to make waste less wasteful
The Swag and Swagger Behind American Presidential Campaigns
From a coloring book to a painted axe, election ephemera remind us of the hard-fought elections of long ago
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