According to new research, two sets of sabers and unusual lower jaw anatomy show that the saber-toothed cat Smilodon fatalis delayed adulting with a long weaning period
Scientists are working on a machine learning tool that could turn anyone with a camera into an expert tracker
Chemists accidentally discovered the material in 1938, and since then it has been used for everything from helping to create the first atomic bomb to keeping your eggs from sticking to your frying pan
Archaeologists argue that ancient fire pits were used for constructing the area's distinctive boats
Gooseneck barnacles are tasty, but expensive, given the skill and guts it takes to gather them from slick rocks slammed by waves
A new book by historian William E. Leuchtenburg examines how the first six commanders in chief embodied the revolutionary spirit and set precedents that shaped their successors' tenures
Untold Stories of American History
In the 1930s, disillusioned farmers and ranchers fought to carve a 49th state out of northern Wyoming, southeastern Montana and western South Dakota
Almost 20 years ago, a Volkswagen Touareg, now on view at the National Museum of American History, won a competition and led to the “birth moment” of self-driving cars
The original “burning man” was the brainchild of a local artist and involves volunteers constructing a 50-foot-tall villain
Houses and businesses across the Greek capital incorporate—or obscure—structures spanning the city’s ancient, Byzantine, medieval and Ottoman eras
Marine biologists discovered that a protein that boosts fluorescent output also enables an antioxidant property
In August 1944, the older brother of Robert and John F. Kennedy died while piloting a drone aircraft over England, leaving his younger siblings to fulfill their father's dreams
Smithsonian Photo Contest Galleries
Never forget your favorite pachyderm with these memorable images from the Smithsonian Magazine Photo Contest
From castle hauntings to hiding evidence of giant humans, the Smithsonian has long been the subject of wild rumors and tall tales
NASA researchers are scrutinizing rocks and dirt brought to Earth from the asteroid Bennu
The athletes' accommodations have come a long way in the last 100 years, expanding into modern global hubs
A massive project prompted by the wildly destructive Hurricane Ike offers a solutions-based preview of our climate future
The very hungry, spiky custodians gobble up the algae that smother coral reefs
Giddyap and get a look at these stunning selections from the Smithsonian Magazine Photo Contest
Novel materials are hitting assembly lines with just the right properties to build cars that are both safer and more fuel-efficient
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