Natural History Museum
This Climate Detective Reconstructs What the Ocean Was Like Millions of Years Ago
Yet, the biggest concern, says Smithsonian curator Brian Huber, is how rapidly the ocean has changed in the past few decades
What Is Hotter Than the Sun?
Get the facts from Smithsonian geologist Liz Cottrell in the latest episode of "The Doctor Is In."
Ancient Toes and Soles of Fossilized Footprints Now 3-D Digitized for the Ages
New research suggests that for the prehistoric foragers that walked this path, labor was divided between men and women
The Story of Charles Willson Peale’s Massive Mastodon
When a European intellectual snubbed the U.S., the well-known artist excavated the giant fossil as evidence of the new Republic’s strength and power
Join a Smithsonian Entomologist and the Monterey Bay Aquarium for This Beetle-Centric 'Animal Crossing' Livestream
Airing on the aquarium's Twitch channel at 4 p.m. EST today, the two-hour session will focus on the video game's diverse insect population
LIVE NOW: Watch the Smithsonian's Earth Optimism Digital Summit
The two-day virtual event will bring scientists and many other experts to highlight success stories in conservation
How to Virtually Explore the Smithsonian From Your Living Room
Tour a gallery of presidential portraits, print a 3-D model of a fossil or volunteer to transcribe historical documents
How Museums Can Help the Public Make Sense of Pandemics
We can’t let fear overrun science, says Sabrina Sholts, the Smithsonian’s curator of biological anthropology
Recognition of Major Osage Leader and Warrior Opens a New Window Into History
The story of Shonke Mon-thi^, a hidden figure in American history, is now recovered at the National Portrait Gallery
These Jellyfish Don't Need Tentacles to Deliver a Toxic Sting
Smithsonian scientists discovered that tiny 'mucus grenades' are responsible for a mysterious phenomenon known as 'stinging water'
You Can Now Download 150,000 Free Illustrations of the Natural World
The artworks, collected by the open-access Biodiversity Heritage Library, range from animal sketches to historical diagrams and botanical studies
Twenty Smithsonian Shows to See in 2020
Women inventors, baseball stamps and a new Kusama Infinity Room are among the offerings
Why This 18th-Century Naturalist Believed He’d Discovered an Eyewitness to the Biblical Flood
Smithsonian paleontologist Hans Sues recounts a colossal tale of mistaken identity
The Smithsonian's Ten Splashiest New Acquisitions of 2019
This year marks the arrival of a brilliant diamond, a hybrid space rocket, exciting paintings and two darling clouded leopard cubs
Whales Are the Biggest Animals to Ever Exist—Why Aren't They Bigger?
New research highlights the role diet plays in dictating a cetacean’s size
Here's What 2019 Scientific Discovery Taught Us About Our Human Origins
Six studies rocked the anthropological world from a new branch of the human family to a face only an Australopithecus could love
How Dan the Zebra Stopped an Ill-Fated Government Breeding Program in Its Tracks
At the centennial of the death of this captive animal, an archaeozoologist visited collections at the Smithsonian to examine human-animal relationships
Ten Smithsonian Artifacts You Can 3-D Print
The list includes Neil Armstrong’s spacesuit, an Abraham Lincoln life mask and a coral skeleton
In 1954, an Extraterrestrial Bruiser Shocked This Alabama Woman
Ann Hodges remains the only human known to have been injured by direct impact of a meteorite
How Scientists Resolved the Mystery of the Devil's Corkscrews
Smithsonian paleontologist Hans-Dieter Sues tells the tale of a fossil find that bedeviled early 20th-century researchers
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