For more than 100 years, the fine line between finks and minks has been blurred
Vivid Images of Civil War Casualties Inspire a Scholar’s Inner Muse
Alexander Gardner’s photography, a record of sacrifice and devastating loss, prompts a new creativity from the show’s curator
The Wrists of Birds Reveal Evolution Undoing Itself
Contrary to earlier claims, a new study shows that evolution may be reversible
Can the Siberian Tiger Make a Comeback?
In Russia’s Far East, an orphaned female tiger is the test case in an experimental effort to save one of the most endangered animals on earth
America Has a Tiger Problem And No One’s Sure How to Solve It
No one even knows how many of the big cats are in the United States
Do Wolves Wag Their Tails Like Dogs and More Questions From Our Readers
Other questions ask if DNA testing has led to the redesignation of species
What Makes Humans Different? Fiction and Cooperation
Historian Yuval Noah Harari previews his book on the past and future of Homo sapiens
The Unbelievable Success of the American Steamship
How “Fulton’s Folly” transformed the nation’s landscape
Why Footbinding Persisted in China for a Millennium
Despite the pain, millions of Chinese women stood firm in their devotion to the tradition
A New View of the Battle of Gallipoli, One of the Bloodiest Conflicts of World War I
The Turks are now rethinking their historic victory in the terrible battle
Why Malcolm X Still Speaks Truth to Power
More than 50 years after his death, Malcolm X remains a towering figure whose passionate writings have enduring resonance
Exploring the Titanic of the Ancient World
Scientists search the wine-dark sea for the remains of a ship that sank 2,000 years ago—carrying what is believed to be the world’s first computer
Decoding the Antikythera Mechanism, the First Computer
Hidden inscriptions offer new clues to the origins of a mysterious astronomical mechanism
Even in the age of Fifty Shades of Grey, the 18th-century libertine is as shocking as ever
The International Space Station Will Soon Be Able to Measure Forest Density Using Lasers
Strengthening the planet’s forests is one critical way to combat climate change
The Director of the African American History Museum Weighs in on ‘Selma’
A film with black history at its core and created by African Americans opens up a “national conversation”
Vinegar-Like Acid Rain May Have Fallen During Earth’s Worst Extinction
Vanilla-flavored rocks hint at a planet scoured by intense acid rain during the Great Dying 252 million years ago
Ancient Scrolls Blackened by Vesuvius Are Readable at Last
X-ray scans can just tease out letters on the warped documents from a library at Herculaneum
The Little-Known History of the Underground Railroad in New York
Pultizer-Prize winning historian Eric Foner uncovers the hidden story behind this passage to freedom
Inside the Three-Decade Evolution of “Star Wars” Costumes
A Smithsonian traveling exhibition offers an unprecedented glimpse at costumes from a galaxy far, far away
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