To Adapt to a Changing Environment 400,000 Years Ago, Early Humans Developed New Tools and Behaviors
When the East African Rift Valley transformed dramatically, new weapons arose and trade expanded
What an Asteroid Could Tell Us About Ancient Earth
Knowing those rocks’ origins will help scientists learn more about the composition of objects in the solar system and asteroid belt
The Wonderfully Weird World of Deep-Sea Squids
For this month’s “Meet a SI-entist,” the Smithsonian’s curator of cephalopods says these are the “intelligent invertebrates”
Six Videos From the Natural History Museum That Put the Pandemic in Context
Explore the life cycle of modern outbreaks, from infection to immunity and vaccines to combat them
Alexander von Humboldt: The Man History Forgot
Rediscover the 19th-century naturalist who traveled on four continents, wrote 2,500 letters, 36 books and hugely influenced early America
How the Revolutionary Thinker Alexander von Humboldt Helped to Create the Smithsonian
The 19th-century polymath continues to influence the Institution’s research; a major Smithsonian exhibition explains how and why
Celebrate Five of Nature’s Best Beards on World Beard Day
In the sea, the sky and the land between, organisms sport bristles, fuzz and fur of all styles
What a 1,000-Year-Old Seal Skull Can Tell Us About Climate Change
In a new study, scientists explain how a seal native to the South Atlantic, but found in Indiana, likely swam to the middle of North America
Meet the Smithsonian’s Mosquito Keeper
Scientist Yvonne Linton reveals what it means to oversee a world-renowned collection of 1.9 million specimens
Five Places Where You Can Collect Fossils in the D.C. Area
You don’t have to venture far to make awesome finds
How Did Amelia Earhart Raise the Money for Her Flights?
You’ve got questions. We’ve got experts
Rare Megamouth Shark Arrives at the Smithsonian
Studying and eventually preserving the megamouth will help researchers learn more about the puzzling species
Celebrate the Smithsonian’s 174th Birthday With a Look at Its First Collections
Historic museum specimens help us learn more about what a species once was like and what it could be like in the future
How to Identify Rocks and Other Questions From Our Readers
Don’t miss the season finale of the National Museum of Natural History’s popular YouTube series, the “Doctor Is In”
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
Meet the Scientist Studying How Cell Phones Change Societies
“Smartphones embody globalization,” says the Smithsonian cultural anthropologist Josh Bell
Elusive, Ultra-Black Fish Are Cloaked to Survive in the Deep Ocean
Special pigment cells in deep-sea fish may provide clues to cancer treatment and stealthy new materials
The DNA of the Viper Reveals an Ancient Map of South America
Although vipers are famous for their venomous bites, it turns out these snakes have another story to tell
Newly digitized, Dunham’s papers reflect her work as a scholar and as a scientist and as a woman doing anthropology in her own right
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