Natural History Museum
Why Are Starfish Shaped Like Stars and More Questions From Our Readers
You asked, we answered
Rethinking the Corny History of Maize
A new genetic study traces the movement of one of the world's most vital crops from Mexico to South America
The Complicated History of the Human and Elephant Relationship
With the new exhibition, “Game Change,” Smithsonian Libraries delves into 150 years of hunting and conservation
Smithsonian Scholars Pick Their Favorite Books of 2018
Here are eleven titles that intrigued and thrilled Smithsonian's knowledge seekers this year
Prehistoric Angolan “Sea Monsters” Take Up Residence at the Natural History Museum
The new fossil exhibition spotlights the majestic marine predators that swept into the South Atlantic shortly after it formed
How the Poppy Came to Symbolize World War I
The red flowers blooming on a battlefield in Belgium, inspired John McCrae to write the war poem “In Flanders Fields”
The Mystery of Ancient Dolphins’ Super-Long Snouts
A new study suggests the extinct cetaceans used their snouts to hit and stun prey, much as swordfish do
The Scientist Grover Krantz Risked It All. . .Chasing Bigfoot
The dedicated anthropologist donated his body to science and it’s on display, but his legacy is complicated
Peer Through the Lens of the World's Best Nature Photographers
Sixty images, including the winners, from the 23rd annual Nature's Best Photography Windland Smith Rice Awards go on view
What Ancient Maize Can Tell Us About Thousands of Years of Civilization in America
It took millennia, but America’s founding farmers developed the grain that would fuel civilizations—and still does
Meet the Real Rock Star of the New Dino Hall—the Fearsome Ceratosaurus
The dinosaur is finally giving up its secrets as it prepares for a long fight with a <i>Stegosaurus</i>
Today's Whales Are Huge, But Why Aren't They Huger?
Most giant cetaceans only got giant in the past 4.5 million years, suggesting they could have room to grow
The Whitney Flame Topaz Smolders in Vibrant Red
A new gemstone at the Natural History Museum is already igniting wonder in viewers
Why Curators Killed Hatcher, the 66-Million-Year-Old Triceratops
The popular dinosaur has a new starring role in the upcoming “Deep Time” exhibition—a meal for T. rex
To Pinpoint the Origin of a Fish, Check Out Its Physique
A new cost-effective tool may help small-scale fisheries simply and accurately determine the origins of a day's catch.
A Jamestown Skeleton is Unearthed, but Only Time—and Science—Will Reveal His True Identity
Jamestown Rediscovery archeologists use new technology to uncover the bones of one of the first English colonists
Homecoming King: The Nation’s T. rex Returns to the Smithsonian
The fully assembled skeleton will be displayed for the first time at the National Museum of Natural History in June 2019.
The Botanical Artist Who Translates Plant Science Into Beautiful Art
The Smithsonian’s first and only botanical illustrator brings her subjects to life in all their scientific glory
Operation Calamari: How the Smithsonian Got Its Giant Squids
After a decade on view, these cephalopod specimens have a growing fan base
How We Elected <i>T. rex</i> to Be Our Tyrant Lizard King
The true story behind our obsession with the last and largest of the tyrannosaurs
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