These five August releases may have been lost in the news cycle
Historic museum specimens help us learn more about what a species once was like and what it could be like in the future
A new study finds monkeys enter charred savannahs to avoid predators, lending support to a controversial theory about what drew hominins to blazes
The works and writings of American artist and art critic Walter Pach are newly available to scholars and the resource is rich with history
Scholars agree the song, endowed with its deep history of Black pride, speaks to the universal human condition
Watch this uplifting video giving voice to stalwarts of the American songbook
Don't miss the season finale of the National Museum of Natural History's popular YouTube series, the "Doctor Is In"
Scientists put a price tag on guano's global benefits, which range from agricultural fertilizer to coral reef enricher
Build a personal oasis with everything from hay bales to scrap wood to a shipping container
Capacity building and local community involvement are key to continuing conservation during the current pandemic
The popular raconteur touched Americans with his humor, newspaper columns, movie star power, philanthropy and as political agitator
Smithsonian fellow Kimberly Probolus looks into the past and future of knowledge tests
More than seventy-five years ago, the atomic blasts killed an estimated 200,000 people
Latrines keep otters up to date on who is around, how they are feeling, and who’s ready to have babies
Wing’s tether-toting drone delivered a winter vest to a retiree in Virginia and now its headed to the Air and Space Museum
A bone containing signs of cancer is the first of its kind found in the fossil record
These five sites will help you find the perfect spot to avoid the summer crowds
Extinction will have lasting and far-reaching consequences for biodiversity, and subsequently for humans
Some researchers are calling for a more nuanced approach when it comes to flora and fauna that adjust their range to accommodate a warming world
A new 3-D microscopy study overturns hundreds of years of reproductive science
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