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Rare Appearance of Two Novas at Once Illuminates the Southern Sky. Here's How to Get a Chance to See It
Smithsonian Magazine
Rare Appearance of Two Novas at Once Illuminates the Southern Sky. Here's How to Get a Chance to See It
The "new stars" are best seen from the Southern Hemisphere, but people have spotted them from the United States by looking near the southern horizon
Smithsonian
A Closer Look at the Kestrels, Hedgehogs and Other Wild Animals That Inhabit Rome
Smithsonian Magazine
A Closer Look at the Kestrels, Hedgehogs and Other Wild Animals That Inhabit Rome
From antiquity to modern times, the city has been rife with creatures that creep, slither, scurry and nest among its pillars and palaces
Smithsonian
Archaeologists Discover Roman Army Camp in the Netherlands—15 Miles Beyond the Empire's Northern Border
Smithsonian Magazine
Archaeologists Discover Roman Army Camp in the Netherlands—15 Miles Beyond the Empire's Northern Border
Researchers think the camp was built during the second century C.E. Stretching across 22 acres, it was identified using a computer model developed by an archaeology student
Smithsonian
A Rare Interstellar Object Is Blazing Through Our Solar System, Marking Only the Third Cosmic Visitor on Record
Smithsonian Magazine
A Rare Interstellar Object Is Blazing Through Our Solar System, Marking Only the Third Cosmic Visitor on Record
The comet follows just two other deep space objects documented by astronomers in 2017 and 2019
Smithsonian
A Bone Bed From the Dawn of the Dinosaurs Has Revealed the Oldest Known Pterosaur Found in North America
Smithsonian
Scientists Have Sequenced an Ancient Egyptian Skeleton's Entire Genome for the Very First Time. Here's What They Found
Smithsonian Magazine
Scientists Have Sequenced an Ancient Egyptian Skeleton's Entire Genome for the Very First Time. Here's What They Found
Dating back more than 4,500 years, the skeleton belonged to a middle-aged man who may have worked as a potter and likely descended from ancestors in North Africa and Mesopotamia
Smithsonian
Bear-Sized Giant Beavers Once Roamed North America, and They're Now the Official State Fossil of Minnesota
Smithsonian Magazine
Bear-Sized Giant Beavers Once Roamed North America, and They're Now the Official State Fossil of Minnesota
The large, extinct creatures roamed the Twin Cities area more than 10,000 years ago and could grow to more than 200 pounds
Smithsonian
The Vatican's Newly Restored Raphael Rooms Spotlight the Great Artist Who Died Before Finishing His Final Project
Smithsonian Magazine
The Vatican's Newly Restored Raphael Rooms Spotlight the Great Artist Who Died Before Finishing His Final Project
As specialists cleaned and studied the rooms in the Apostolic Palace, they learned new information about the Renaissance painter's experimental techniques
Smithsonian
How an Ancestral Peruvian Ceremony Is Saving the Once-Endangered Vicuña
Smithsonian Magazine
How an Ancestral Peruvian Ceremony Is Saving the Once-Endangered Vicuña
Each year in the first weeks of June, Indigenous communities in the Andes form a human chain to corral the camelids and shear their valuable wool
Smithsonian
Jane Austen Never Loved Bath—but Bath Loves Jane Austen. Now, the City Is Exploring Why the Novelist Was So Unhappy There
Smithsonian Magazine
Jane Austen Never Loved Bath—but Bath Loves Jane Austen. Now, the City Is Exploring Why the Novelist Was So Unhappy There
To celebrate the author's 250th birthday, a new exhibition spotlights her complicated relationship with the English city where she set parts of "Persuasion" and "Northanger Abbey"
Smithsonian
How Women in New Jersey Gained—and Lost—the Right to Vote More Than a Century Before the 19th Amendment Granted Suffrage Nationwide
Smithsonian Magazine
How Women in New Jersey Gained—and Lost—the Right to Vote More Than a Century Before the 19th Amendment Granted Suffrage Nationwide
Vague phrasing in the state’s Revolutionary-era Constitution enfranchised women who met specific property requirements. A 1790 law explicitly allowed female suffrage, but this privilege was revoked in 1807
Smithsonian
U.S. Measles Cases Reach a Record High Since the Disease Was Declared Eliminated 25 Years Ago
Smithsonian Magazine
U.S. Measles Cases Reach a Record High Since the Disease Was Declared Eliminated 25 Years Ago
With nearly six months left in the year, the total number of cases so far in 2025 has surpassed every year since 1992
Smithsonian
The Largest Martian Meteorite in the World Is Heading to Auction and Could Sell for $4 Million
Smithsonian Magazine
The Largest Martian Meteorite in the World Is Heading to Auction and Could Sell for $4 Million
Discovered in Niger in 2023, the rare chunk weighs 54 pounds and represents more than 6 percent of all Mars material on Earth
Smithsonian
This Museum Is Asking Visitors Whether It Should Continue to Display Mummified Human Remains
Smithsonian Magazine
This Museum Is Asking Visitors Whether It Should Continue to Display Mummified Human Remains
The Manchester Museum in England is inviting guests to share feedback on Asru, an ancient Egyptian woman whose body was unwrapped 200 years ago
Smithsonian
A Rare, Pregnant Ichthyosaur Fossil Discovered in Chile Is Revealing More Secrets About the Early Cretaceous World
Smithsonian Magazine
A Rare, Pregnant Ichthyosaur Fossil Discovered in Chile Is Revealing More Secrets About the Early Cretaceous World
The fossil helps scientists better understand not just the animal, but our planet's geology
Smithsonian
The Getty Villa Reopens Six Months After the Devastating Palisades Fire
Smithsonian Magazine
The Getty Villa Reopens Six Months After the Devastating Palisades Fire
The iconic Los Angeles venue is welcoming visitors back with a new exhibition featuring artworks and artifacts from ancient Greece
Smithsonian
Why Are So Many More Women Being Diagnosed With ADHD?
Smithsonian Magazine
Why Are So Many More Women Being Diagnosed With ADHD?
Experts once thought ADHD was something only boys experienced. The research is finally starting to catch up with reality
Smithsonian
Archaeologists Unearth Traces of an Iron Age Settlement and Roman Villa in England
Smithsonian Magazine
Archaeologists Unearth Traces of an Iron Age Settlement and Roman Villa in England
The excavation, which followed the discovery of two Roman swords in 2023, is providing historians with fresh insights into Britain’s ancient history
Smithsonian
The Architect Who Designed the Iconic Entrances to the Paris Métro Is Finally Getting the Attention He Deserves
Smithsonian Magazine
The Architect Who Designed the Iconic Entrances to the Paris Métro Is Finally Getting the Attention He Deserves
When Hector Guimard's subway designs were unveiled in the early 1900s, the public rejected his Art Nouveau style. Soon, a new museum devoted to his work will open in the city
Smithsonian
Melting Glaciers Will Lead to More Volcanic Eruptions, Study Suggests. Now, All Eyes Are On Antarctica
Smithsonian Magazine
Melting Glaciers Will Lead to More Volcanic Eruptions, Study Suggests. Now, All Eyes Are On Antarctica
New research from the Chilean Patagonia has identified a link between glacial retreat and underground volcanic activity
2025/07/14 21:35:22
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