Over the past half-century the small town of Columbus, Indiana, has turned itself into a showplace of modern architecture
The Indians who first feasted with the English colonists were far more sophisticated than you were taught in school. But that wasn't enough to save them
When orbiting pranksters Wally Schirra and Tom Stafford launched into "Jingle Bells," Mission Control almost lost control
A look back at the world in Smithsonian Magazine's first year
The triumphant return of the Lewis and Clark expedition
Shaped by persecution, tribal strife and an unforgiving landscape, Iraq's Kurds have put their dream of independence on hold-for now
December anniversaries momentous or merely memorable
The secret diary of William Clark
December anniversariesmomentous or merely memorable
Despite federal opposition to embryonic stem cell research, academic freedom and profits in California is luring scientists to the field
In Darwin's Galápagos Islands, evolution is on display
A very large mammal will help tell an even weightier tale—about the ocean in this crowded, challenging century
Readers respond to the October issue
A creationist when he visited the Galápagos Islands, Darwin grasped the significance of the unique wildlife he found there only after he returned to London
Novel camera traps have documented the elusive cat in Arizona, suggesting it may not be gone from the United States after all
In Katrina's aftermath, the trumpeter has rallied support for his native New Orleans
Weegee's wartime snapshot was widely seen as social criticism, but it was, in fact, a farce
A renowned director contemplates the lessons of history
The architect melds surface simplicity and underlying intellectual complexity into works of enduring power
The architect's daring, outside-the-box buildings have revitalized urban spaces
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