At the beginning of the 20th century, a group of women known as the Harvard Observatory computers helped revolutionize the science of astronomy
The Smithsonian Institution's 12th Secretary says he'll step down next October
Dan Corson's latest installation in Seattle—flower sculptures that light up at night—show that solar energy is viable even in the cloudy Pacific Northwest
The best questions and responses as pulled from Twitter
Today the Zoo's veterinarians gave the giant panda cub a full exam and pronounced the cub healthy and thriving
Three new exhibitions explore humans' relationship to the ocean
White whales, such as the recently spotted humpback nicknamed Migaloo, are rare and elusive creatures. How many are there and why are they white?
Earwax collected from a beached whale shows that the creature ingested a host of toxins, such as DDT and mercury, throughout its life
Cornelia Kavanagh's sculptures magnify tiny sea butterflies—ocean acidification's unlikely mascots—hundreds of times
Employee morale rose but architecture critics were repulsed upon the opening of the company's new campus in Purchase, New York
On September 15, 1963, four were killed in the Ku Klux Klan bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama
The fleur de sel has long been a trademark of French culinary craftsmanship, Oregon’s Jacobsen may have produced a salt crystal that competes with the best
With the help of a little liquid nitrogen, German photographer Martin Klimas captures the fragile chaos of flowers as they explode
Being a righty or a lefty could be linked to variations in a network of genes that influence right or left asymmetries in the body and brain
The small hopping insect <i>Issus coleoptratus</i> uses toothed gears on its joints to precisely synchronize the kicks of its hind legs as it jumps forward
In a new book, documentary and exhibition, photographer Edward Burtynsky looks at humans' dramatic relationship with water
For the new documentary More Than Honey, filmmakers captured the insects mating in midair
In the 1960s, Pepsi rebranded with a new slogan, a new look, and a cutting edge modernist building
The fish can sell for hundreds of thousands of dollars each. But just 45 years ago, big bluefin tuna were caught for fun, killed and ground into pet food
Birds with high ratios of brain size to body size maintain lower levels of stress hormones in their blood compared to their less intellectual counterparts
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