Participants promote a family-oriented fellowship of friends who like to beat each other up while wearing skates
History remembers the English queen as a murderous monster, but the real story of Mary I is far more nuanced
This wearable spacecraft let humans take one giant leap away from Earth
Astronomers have more places to look for signs of intelligent life and more advanced tools to find it
A sled in the Smithsonian collections marks the historic race
Over time, trash that has been floating in the ocean gets covered in algae and other micro-organisms
You don’t have to travel to Europe to see turrets, gate houses and other architectural features reminiscent of the Middle Ages
Sargent made his portraits in charcoal—a medium that allowed completion in less than three hours rather than the weeks it took for his full-length oils
After lobbying in support of the 19th Amendment, free thinker Helen Hamilton Gardener strove to preserve the movement's legacy in the public memory
A study of beads made from ostrich eggshells suggests the humans of the Kalahari Desert region formed social networks to help each other
A temporary solution during months-long school shutdowns, the online classrooms may be an experiment the rest of the world can learn from
A litany of issues in business, finance, container ship loading and aircraft loading derive from this one simple dilemma
Tiny Winnemucca, with its high concentration of Basque restaurants, is doing its part to preserve Basque traditions
Mapping the Gay Guides visualizes local queer spaces' evolution between 1965 and 1980
A dive into the science behind why hand-washing and alcohol-based hand sanitizer work so well
Seventy years ago, the German car manufacturer started producing the Microbus—the first van and a striking vehicle for protest
An exhibition from the Archives of American Art asks artists—and the viewer—to ponder what makes art feminist, and how that definition has evolved
The 19th-century publisher made reform-minded, opinion-driven journalism commercially viable
In an illustrated narrative, Perseverance—scheduled to launch this summer—searches for any signs of past microbial life on Mars
By turns faithful and deeply irreverent, the newest Austen adaptation offers an oddly delightful mix of 19th-century satire and Wes Anderson
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