Continuing Conservation in a Planet on Lockdown
Capacity building and local community involvement are key to continuing conservation during the current pandemic
Why We Need to Save the Parasites
Extinction will have lasting and far-reaching consequences for biodiversity, and subsequently for humans
How Hurricanes Have Shaped the Course of U.S. History
A new book examines the 500-year record of devastating storms affecting the nation’s trajectory
Meet the Scientist Studying How Cell Phones Change Societies
“Smartphones embody globalization,” says the Smithsonian cultural anthropologist Josh Bell
Five Scientific Achievements That Happened During Coronavirus Lockdown
Quarantine did not stop these innovators from discovering new species, creating the elusive fifth state of matter remotely, and more
How COVID-19 Will Change the Way We Fight Wildfires
Prepare for the return of the Smokey Bear method as social distancing prevents firefighters from using more modern strategies
Do Volcanoes Spew a Cooler Lava?
Smithsonian geologist Liz Cottrell has answers to your questions on black lava and the Earth’s molten outer core in the “Dr Is In” video series
This Climate Detective Reconstructs What the Ocean Was Like Millions of Years Ago
Yet, the biggest concern, says Smithsonian curator Brian Huber, is how rapidly the ocean has changed in the past few decades
Meet the Organizers of #BlackBirdersWeek
Many of us had shared experiences of racism while being black outdoors, say Ashley Gary, Sheridan Alford, Chelsea Connor and Joseph Saunders
Why the Jurassic Coast Is One of the Best Fossil-Collecting Sites on Earth
Along a famed stretch of English coastline, amateurs and professionals collect 200-million-year-old treasures before they are reclaimed by the waves
Get the facts from Smithsonian geologist Liz Cottrell in the latest episode of “The Doctor Is In.”
Geologist Liz Cottrell answers your questions in the second season of the National Museum of Natural History’s YouTube series, ‘The Dr. Is In’
Ancient Toes and Soles of Fossilized Footprints Now 3-D Digitized for the Ages
New research suggests that for the prehistoric foragers that walked this path, labor was divided between men and women
Forty Years After Mount St. Helens, Scientists Make Tiny Eruptions to Study Volcanoes
Meet the Smithsonian scientist who makes and studies tiny volcanic eruptions
Saving Our Planet Starts With the Soil
A new documentary ‘carbon cowboys’ by Peter Byck brings to light a host of farmers promoting soil health as a great business plan
Decades of Tree Data Reveal Forests Under Attack
Smithsonian researchers with ForestGEO found that invasive species are linked to roughly one in four tree deaths in a section of the Blue Ridge Mountains
Framing Hope Through a Photographer’s Lens
Marine biologist Cristina Mittermeier discovered that visual storytelling, rather than data sets, allowed her to be a better advocate for the ocean
These Are the Decade’s Biggest Discoveries in Human Evolution
Celebrate the tenth anniversary of the Smithsonian’s “David H. Koch Hall of Human Origins” with some of the biggest discoveries in human evolution
CNN’s Bill Weir Offers Solutions for How to Talk Climate Change in a Contentious World
Smithsonian’s Earth Optimism Summit features CNN’s Chief Climate Correspondent Bill Weir
In a World Facing Grim Challenges, Hope Still Reigns Supreme
Smithsonian Secretary Lonnie G. Bunch III says: ‘It’s time to put our heads down, and work’
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