Drivers gear up to set speed records at Utah's desolate Bonneville Salt Flats
A unique study documents the disappearance of Alaska's glaciers, blamed on global warming
Fifty years ago a brewer's bet spawned a compelling compendium of feats, stunts and trivia
We asked readers to tell us where they were and how they reacted to the news that World War II had ended. And what a response we got!
Remembering the sound and fury—and the joy—of the end of World War II
From the beginning, the cost of increasing and diffusing knowledge exceeded even Smithson's generosity
As the corps finally makes contact with the Shoshone Indians, interpreter Sacagawea reunites with her family
Recent attacks on people off the Florida coast are a reminder of the animal's fierce nature. Yet scientists say the predator is itself in grave danger
Americans discard more than 100 million electronic devices each year. As "e-waste" piles up, so does concern about this growing threat to the environment
A book about atomic scientist J. Robert Oppenheimer charts the debate over deployment of the first A-bomb and the anxiety that suffused its first live test
The image of Bruce McCandless' spacewalk two decades ago still amazes. It was the first untethered walk everand was among the last
How did the ivory-billed woodpecker, which was feared extinct, hang on all these years?
How a cultivated dislike of gardening can lead to more time on the porch
How a stranded cub became the living symbol for one of America's best-known advertising campaigns
A pop-music confection known as The Village People belted out disco hits in the 1970s that morphed into American standards
Each summer models decked out in period dress give artists a picture of life in the Wild West
On the trail of art thieves and elusive elephants
She bought the electric drill to get a tidier household. Then she found out about the secret sisterhood
SMITHSONIAN's second annual photo contest generates more than 30,000 entries
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