Ann Hodges remains the only human known to have been injured by direct impact of a meteorite
Confectionary artworks span everything from an Aztec calendar stone to King Tut's tomb
Beyond Dinosaurs: The Secrets of Earth's Past
Smithsonian paleontologist Hans-Dieter Sues tells the tale of a fossil find that bedeviled early 20th-century researchers
Urbanization and the spread of artificial light are transforming all of earth's species, bringing about a host of unintended consequences
Stretch young learners’ minds with everything from card games to robotic spheres
Photographer Tina Freeman's exhibition ‘Lamentations’ at the New Orleans Museum of Art juxtaposes two different environments
The wasp genus <em>Idris</em> had only been known to infest spider eggs, until now
Disappearing patches of ice unleash new artifacts for discovery, but many could quickly degrade exposed to the elements
A powerful outburst in a distant galaxy produced photons with high enough energies to be detected by ground-based telescopes for the first time
You’ve got questions. We’ve got experts
The sanctuary is home to 1,000 fish and counting
A newly developed gene therapy is saving young people afflicted by the rare but deadly diagnosis
Never before had scientists seen the phenomenon until they rallied colleagues around the world to view a galaxy far, far away
Smithsonian scientists used genetically-engineered butterflies to learn that evolution can take a different path to achieve the same thing
A promising new technique could lead to lasting skin grafts after burns or other injuries
Material gathered and preserved in a pack rat's midden helps researchers open new windows on the past
A skeleton from the Cretaceous found in Japan reveals an early bird with a tail nub resembling the avians of today
Communities of bacteria and other microbes in the human mouth can help researchers learn how these groups of organisms affect human health
Researchers are developing a new long-acting, self-administered device that delivers hormones beneath the skin’s surface
<i>Danuvius guggenmosi</i>, a “totally new and different” species of ape, would have moved through the trees using its forelimbs and hindlimbs equally
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