Natural History Museum
Inventing a Vocabulary to Help Inuit People Talk About Climate Change
One team is working with Inuvialuit elders to come up with a renewable energy terminology—and maybe revive a dying language
These Ancient Whale Baleen Artifacts Can Now Tell New Stories
How an innovative protein analysis technique helped solve a decades-old mystery
The Color-Changing Marvel of Tree Frogs Looking for Love
A new study sheds light on the wild world of "dynamically dichromatic" amphibians
This Replica of a Tlingit Killer Whale Hat Is Spurring Dialogue About Digitization
Collaboration between museums and indigenous groups provides educational opportunities, archival documentation—and ethical dilemmas
Prying Apart the Mighty Bite of a Malaysian Trap-Jaw Ant
Its mandibles strike in a fraction of a blink of an eye, but how does it do it?
Scientists Are Using This Collection of Wood Samples to Combat Illegal Logging
Archie F. Wilson loved wood enough to amass the country’s premiere private collection. Now scientists are using it as a weapon against illegal logging
A Scholar Follows a Trail of Dead Mice and Discovers a Lesson in Why Museum Collections Matter
A former Smithsonian curator authors a new book, <i>Inside the Lost Museum</i>
Behind the Scenes: Skinning Condors in the Name of Science
One intrepid reporter documents the careful science, artistry and gross factor of a very strange party
The Middle East Is a Treasure Trove of Natural Wonders. Now It Has a Museum to Show Them Off
Everything from early human skulls to priceless taxidermy relics will be on display in the ark-shaped museum
Two Smithsonian Scientists Retrace the Mysterious Circumstances of an 1866 Death and Change History
Did the 19th-century naturalist Robert Kennicott die of his own hand?
Telling the Story of 19th-Century Native American Treasures Through Bird Feathers
Famed explorer John Wesley Powell’s archive of his 19th century travels is newly examined
The Key to Protecting Life on Earth May Be Barcoding It
An easier way to read DNA is helping scientists tease apart species and ecosystems in nuanced ways
Why These Humans Are Museum Treasures, Too
A portrait photographer captured 24 staffers from the National Museum of Natural History posing with their favorite artifacts from the collections
A Rare Public Display of a 17th-Century Mayan Manuscript
With the book newly digitized, scholars are reinterpreting a story of native resistance from within its pages
Bones of the Hawaiian Petrel Open Up a Window Into the Birds' Changing Diet
Industrial fishing may play a role in the shift
The Campaign Is On to Save the Natural History Collections of a Louisiana University
The school is displacing millions of specimens in favor of a new track
Dian Fossey’s Gorilla Skulls Are Scientific Treasures and a Symbol of Her Fight
At a new Smithsonian exhibition, the skulls of “Limbo” and “Green Lady” have a story to tell
In Its Layers, This Stunning Pink Coralline Algae Holds Secrets of Climates Past
Unseen and unsung for centuries, these underwater species of coralline algae are providing scientists with an unparalleled new archive of information
This Hinged Skull Helps Dragonfish Eat Prey Bigger Than Its Head
Scientists have discovered the world's only group of fish that has this unbelievable ability
Smithsonian Scientist and a Reef-Diving Grandmother Team Up in Discovery of New Hermit Crab
A new species of hermit crab is named to honor her 7-year-old granddaughter Molly
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