The Priceless Impact Harriet Tubman Will Have as the Face of the $20 Bill
Curator Nancy Bercaw from the African American History Museum discusses the freedom fighter’s ongoing legacy
Hosting an Event? Don’t Toss Leftover Food, Donate It
With an Uber-like app, Transfernation is reducing food waste while feeding those in need
How to Make Science Fiction Become Fact, in Three Steps
Speakers at Smithsonian magazine’s “Future is Here” festival said be patient, persistent, but never, ever pessimistic
Nikola Tesla’s Struggle to Remain Relevant
An offbeat Belgrade museum reveals the many mysteries of the prolific, late-19th-century inventor
North American Mammoths May Have Been a Single Species
Woolly mammoths and other varieties may have been intermingling, DNA analyses show
‘Unbought and Unbossed’: When a Black Woman Ran for the White House
The congresswoman tried to win the White House by consolidating the Black vote and the women’s vote, but she ran into trouble
Shining Light on Brazil’s Secret Coral Reef
The massive, previously unstudied reef is unlike any other known on Earth
Is Bratislava’s Communist-Era Architecture Worth Preserving?
For residents of Slovakia’s capital, Cold War structures recall a painful past
A Member of the Little Rock Nine Discusses Her Struggle to Attend Central High
At 15, Minnijean Brown faced down the Arkansas National Guard, Now Her Story and Personal Items are Archived at the Smithsonian
Celebrating 500 Years of German’s Beer Purity Law
Germany’s treasured—and controversial—rule has a fascinating past and an uncertain future
When Electricity and Music Collide, the Tesla Coils Sing
The band ArcAttack delivers a high-voltage performance with a side of science education
Why Didn’t the First Earth Day’s Predictions Come True? It’s Complicated
More than half a century ago, scientists and activists predicted utter doom for the planet. That hasn’t happened yet, but it’s nothing to cheer about
Is There Such a Thing as a “Bad” Shakespeare Play?
More than four hundred years after the Bard’s death, the quality of his works is still a fluid scale
Deconstructing what makes the Bard’s play so problematic
Beyond Raspberry Berets: What Prince Left Behind
From portraits to guitars, The Artist’s legacy lives on at the Smithsonian
Discover the Real Ramen at a Shrine to Slurpy Noodles
The iconic dish has surprising regional roots
You Can’t Sleep While Traveling Because Your Brain Acts Like a Dolphin’s
On the first night in a new place, half your brain stays awake to watch out for danger
What Does a Dying Forest Sound Like?
As temperatures rise, scientists scramble to pinpoint trees in danger of drought
The Fight Against Ginseng Poaching in the Great Smoky Mountains
A profitable black market for the native shrub pits the National Park Service against poor residents of Appalachia
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