Sustainability at the Smithsonian

Debris is heaped on the banks of a river.

Smithsonian American Art Museum and the Renwick Gallery

After Hurricane Helene, Survivors Have Been in a Race Against Time to Protect Family Heirlooms, Photographs and Keepsakes

Two young people surrounded by greenery. One person has their hand outstretched towards a leafy bush in front of them.

Smithsonian American Women's History Museum

Environmental Justice Academy Educates and Inspires Youth for Innovative Change

Candid photo of Elena Terry smiling holding a white dish full of colorful beans, peppers, and corn tilted away from her.

Smithsonian American Women's History Museum

How Chef Elena Terry Revisited Heritage Seeds to Cultivate Hope

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National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute

Ten Fascinating Facts About the Arapaima, the Largest Freshwater Fish in South America

A clear blue river winds through a reedy wetland, reflecting the clouds overhead. A wooden boardwalk with rails overlooks the river on the right.

Smithsonian Environmental Research Center

Hot, Fresh & Flooded: These Wetlands Spew Out the Most Methane

Imama

Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute

Between Pasture and Forest: The Crusade to Protect the Jaguar in Panama

Head and shoulders photo of Denise Breitburg, a woman with glasses and shoulder-length gray hair, with forested mountains in the background.

Smithsonian Environmental Research Center

Wait, the Ocean Is Losing Oxygen? Q&A With Denise Breitburg

Sustainability News From Smithsonian Magazine

These four lightbulbs augured a future with nuclear power.

SMART NEWS

On This Day in 1951, Four Illuminated Lightbulbs in Idaho Were Evidence of the First Time a Nuclear Power Plant Generated Electricity

The plant-based egg substitutes available today are less than perfect. Food scientists are working hard to improve them — and, maybe, make them better tasting and more nutritious than the real thing.

INNOVATION

Scientists Are Trying to Crack the Recipe for the Perfect Plant-Based Eggs

In Ecuador, a glass frog from a new species identified in 2022, Hyalinobatrachium nouns, hangs from the underside of a leaf, seen from below.

SCIENCE

The Andes’ Translucent Glass Frogs Need to Be Seen to Be Saved

A selection of the bounty from Isabella Dalla Ragione’s orchard, including apples, pears, plums, almonds, hazelnuts and grapes.

ARTS & CULTURE

Meet the Italian 'Fruit Detective' Who Investigates Centuries-Old Paintings for Clues About Produce That Has Disappeared From the Kitchen Table

Thirty-six homes—the world’s last topped with a traditional eelgrass roof—all sit here on Laeso.

INNOVATION

Could Eelgrass Be the Next Big Bio-Based Building Material?

Climate Change News

In 2024, engineers used a fluorescent protein found in some jellyfish to create a non-toxic spray that highlights fingerprints at a crime scene.

INNOVATION

Seven Scientific Discoveries From 2024 That Could Lead to New Inventions

Daniel Bachman at home in Madison County, Virginia, with his trusty Martin D-18 guitar.

INNOVATION

A Brilliant Folk Musician Turned the Natural Sounds of the Blue Ridge Mountains Into Powerful Songs

Stories in a wide variety of scientific disciplines made our list this year.

SMART NEWS

The Ten Most Significant Science Stories of 2024

Sombrero ground lizards (Pholidoscelis corvinus) are endemic to Sombrero Island, north of Anguilla, which means they're found nowhere else on the planet.

SMART NEWS

This Once-Rare Lizard Bounced Back From the Brink of Extinction After 'Painstaking' Restoration Efforts in the Caribbean

Air Ring 48 attaches to the base of a construction helmet, providing crucial airflow to the sweatiest areas of the head and neck.

INNOVATION

Could This New Wearable Device Reduce Heat Stress in Construction Workers?

A fossil skull of a prehistoric amphibian, found in a 230-million-year-old burrow in Wyoming, turned out to be from an unknown species.

SMART NEWS

A Paleontologist Cracked Open a Rock and Discovered a Prehistoric Amphibian With a Clever Survival Strategy

Researchers found that in 2023, a decrease in low-altitude clouds, specifically over the Atlantic Ocean, drove an increase in the planet's temperature.

SMART NEWS

Scientists Find Another Reason Why 2023 Was So Hot: a Decline in Low-Lying Clouds