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Ornithologist Bruce Beehler tracks down what he calls the “Magnificent Seven,” a charismatic group of migratory birds, in his new book ...
Historical accounts of vast ocean waters glowing in the dark go back hundreds of years, and researchers are still trying to determine exactly what triggers the phenomenon ...
To thank America for its support during the war, France sent a boxcar stuffed with gifts to each state. But in the late 1950s, New Jersey's disappeared without a trace ...
Florida land boom. But false advertising and natural disasters thwarted many settlers' visions of striking it rich in the land of sunshine ...
Discovered in the ruins of Tikal, the altar sheds light on strained relations between the Maya city and Teotihuacán—which was located more than 600 miles away ...
In preparation for the summer road trip season, historian Allen Pietrobon joins Smithsonian Associates on April 28 to discuss ...
A butter lamb has taken center stage on my family’s Easter table for as long as I can remember. Each year at Easter, my ...
Scientists tested crows on their ability to recognize “geometric regularity,” a skill previously assumed to be unique to humans ...
The exhibition features more than 400 of the 87-year-old artist's works, which are spread throughout the Louis Vuitton ...
The Marlette Flume was hardly Nevada’s only 19th-century engineering wonder: the Silver State’s rise was built on ambitious ...
To combat one of Australia’s most troublesome species, researchers are developing hungry tadpoles that never grow up ...
How Lockheed’s P-3 kept the Cold War from turning hot. Submarines are hard to kill. For military strategists, no warship ...
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