One team is working with Inuvialuit elders to come up with a renewable energy terminology—and maybe revive a dying language
The editors of the new book, “Unseen” talk about recognizing the paper of record’s biases
Bloodstain pattern analysis is used in murder investigations - analysts draw on chemistry, mathematics and physics to determine the area of origin
A scientist and admired cartoonist explore how today’s research is becoming tomorrow’s innovations in a new book
Future Mars colonists may want to form their own legal system. What would stop them?
The material is expected to spark new interest in the 35th president's death
When the British army held Francis Scott Key captive aboard one of their warships during the Battle of Baltimore, his stay inspired enemy's patriotic song
Frances Glessner Lee's "Nutshell Studies" exemplify the intersection of forensic science and craft
Once a state-run industry, beer-making in Taiwan is blending globally-minded brewing with local flavors
And other surprising facts about how we speak to infants
Octopi are masters of disguise, able to change both the color and texture of their skin. Engineers have developed a material that can do similar tricks
Firefighters may soon get safety help from a new technology that assesses terrain and plots a course out
On September 8th, 1974, famous daredevil Evel Knievel climbed into a steam-powered rocket and attempted to blast across Idaho's Snake River Canyon
Experimental Dutch designer Joris Laarman uses algorithms and digital technology to innovate through constraint
An epic natural disaster restored the forest of an earlier America
Diverse artifacts all across the Smithsonian Institution captivate and confound in equal measure
Combining machine learning, artificial intelligence and autonomous vehicles could revolutionize how people with disabilities get around their communities
During World War I, the scientist invented a mobile x-ray unit, called a "Little Curie," and trained 150 women to operate it
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