academic and careers

Help name the kiwi chick!

The Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute’s newest female brown kiwi chick needs a name and you can help!

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academic and careers

Alan Alda: Relating Through Improvisation

As the host of PBS’s “Scientific American Frontiers,” Alan Alda has interviewed scientists, physicists, neuroscientists, and academics. Forging a connection with these guests through freewheeling […]

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  • History & Culture
  • Science & Nature
  • Video

academic and careers

Mark Bradford: Pickett’s Charge at the Hirshhorn Museum

Internationally renowned artist Mark Bradford will debut one of his largest works to date with “Pickett’s Charge,” a monumental new commission that spans nearly 400 […]

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  • Art
  • History & Culture
  • Video
  • Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden

academic and careers

Marcia Ball at the Folklife Festival

 Blues singer and pianist Marcia Ball performs “Louella” at the 2008 Smithsonian Folklife Festival.      

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  • Art
  • History & Culture
  • Video
  • Smithsonian Folklife Festival

academic and careers

Keeping zoo animals happy, healthy

 The zoo extends the collecting mission of the Smithsonian into the realm of the living. From the Series: Stories From the Vault: Random? http://bit.ly/2gfy5hO

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academic and careers

Smithsonian Affiliates in your neighborhood

An overview of the Smithsonian Affiliations program and its reach in communities across the United States. Is the Smithsonian in your neighborhood?

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  • Art
  • History & Culture
  • Meet Our People
  • Video

academic and careers

Kids’ video: “Red Bird” – Dan Zanes & Friends

“Red Bird” from Dan Zanes and Friends’ album ‘Lead Belly, Baby’ featuring Ashley Phillips and Shareef Swindell, Smithsonian Folkways Recordings. To learn more click here: […]

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  • History & Culture
  • Video



academic and careers

New Orleans Jazz Parade – 1968

 This film depicts the Onward Brass Band parading through the French Quarter of New Orleans and picking up second liners along the way. The […]

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  • History & Culture
  • Video
  • Anacostia Community Museum
  • jazz
  • Smithsonian Institution Archives


academic and careers

Knitting plastic Wiphalas in Peru

Aymar Ccopacatty (Aymara), NMAI Artist Leadership Program (ALP) participant, tells his personal story of the environmental impact on Puno, Peru, of all-too-commonly discarded commercial plastic […]

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  • Art
  • History & Culture
  • Video
  • National Museum of the American Indian

academic and careers

About the Renwick’s “Parallax Gap”

“Parallax Gap” transforms the Renwick Gallery’s Bettie Rubenstein Grand Salon into a visual puzzle. This immersive, site-specific installation explores examples of interplay between craft and […]

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academic and careers

The Invention of Thanksgiving

An interview with National Museum of the American Indian curator Paul Chaat Smith (Comanche).  From the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian exhibition “Americans.” The […]

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  • History & Culture
  • Meet Our People
  • Video
  • National Museum of the American Indian

academic and careers

2017 Freer|Sackler Year in Review

Highlights of the year 2017 Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery

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  • Art
  • History & Culture
  • Video
  • Arthur M. Sackler Gallery
  • Freer Gallery of Art

academic and careers

Endangered Guam rail chick hatches

A Guam rail chick hatched at the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute Jan. 16, 2018. The chick hatched in an incubator and will be hand-raised by […]

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academic and careers

Hummingbirds dodge and weave

Tweaks in muscle and wing form give different hummingbird species varying levels of agility. The deft turns of hummingbirds in flight, as shown in a […]

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academic and careers

Installation of the Obama portraits

On February 12, 2018, the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery unveiled its commissioned portraits of former President Barack Obama and Mrs. Michelle Obama by artists Kehinde […]

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  • Art
  • History & Culture
  • Video
  • National Portrait Gallery

academic and careers

Pelican spiders: Ancient assassins that eat their own kind

At the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History, curator of arachnids and myriapods Hannah Wood has examined and analyzed hundreds of pelican spiders both in the field […]

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academic and careers

Astronaut advice: Peggy Whitson

  Find your passion,” says veteran Astronaut Peggy Whitson. The Iowa native holds the record for time in space by an American. Learn all about […]

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  • History & Culture
  • Science & Nature
  • Space
  • Video
  • National Air and Space Museum

academic and careers

Elephant poaching crisis in Myanmar

Scientists at the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute (SCBI) have found that poaching is an emerging crisis for Asian elephants in Myanmar. Researchers first became aware […]

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academic and careers

Smithsonian Folkways new release

New on Smithsonian Folkways Recordings: This official music video is for “Ripest of Apples” by Anna & Elizabeth, from the new album ‘The Invisible Comes […]

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academic and careers

Burning Man’s Mr. and Mrs. Ferguson

 Husband and wife artists, Mr. and Mrs. Ferguson, (who married at Burning Man in 2011) create detailed, tactile, often whimsical large-scale artworks, including the […]

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academic and careers

Droids visit Smithsonian

On May 4, 2018, members of the DC R2D2 Builders Club visited the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History with their droids. Along with thousands […]

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  • Art
  • History & Culture
  • Science & Nature
  • Space
  • Video
  • National Museum of American History

academic and careers

Rare Guam kingfisher hatched

A female Guam kingfisher, a brightly colored bird and one of the most endangered bird species on the planet, hatched at the Smithsonian Conservation Biology […]

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academic and careers

Artist Richard Wilkes on “Evotrope”

 Inspired by Steampunk design, Richard Wilks talks about his larger than life 3-point mobile contraption. Through the merging of transportation and art, he created […]

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academic and careers

Scientists observe stone tool use by Cebus monkeys

White-faced capuchin monkeys in Panama’s Coiba National Park habitually use hammer-and-anvil stones to break hermit crab shells, snail shells, coconuts and other food items, according […]

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academic and careers

Coral reefs and ocean acidification

Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute MarineGEO Postdoctoral Fellow Maggie Johnnson outlines her research studying the effects of ocean acidification on marine coral near Bocas del Toro, […]

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academic and careers

Anacostia’s Goodman League games

A peek inside the gates at the Goodman Games late summer 2017. Held in the heart of Anacostia’s historic Barry Farm, the Goodman League hosts […]

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  • History & Culture
  • Video
  • Anacostia Community Museum

academic and careers

Quillwork Girl and Her New Seven Brothers

This animation tells a Cheyenne story of how the Big Dipper came to be when a girl and her loyal brothers escape from a bison. […]

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  • History & Culture
  • Science & Nature
  • Space
  • Video
  • National Museum of the American Indian

academic and careers

Armenian Wedding Ceremony

At the 2018 Smithsonian Folklife Festival, Armenian participants Mariam Hovhannisyan and Stepan Toroyan—who were recently married—recreated a traditional ceremony on the National Mall, with contributions […]

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  • Art
  • History & Culture
  • Video
  • Smithsonian Folklife Festival


academic and careers

Mosquito road

Jose Loaiza, a research associate at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute in Panama, has determined that disease carrying mosquitoes move along Panama’s highways by laying […]

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  • Animals
  • Science & Nature
  • Video
  • Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute


academic and careers

What is Con Safos?

Josh T. Franco, national collector for Smithsonian’s Archives of American Art, explains a copyright created by Mexican American artists to safeguard their work and reaffirm […]

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academic and careers

Namibian specimens come to the herbarium of the National Museum of Natural History

Dried specimens of nearly 800 flowering plants were acquired by the Botany Department of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History from the National Botanical Research Institute in Windhoek, Namibia, Africa. The collection includes nearly 160 specimens from the Compositae, or sunflower family.

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academic and careers

Smithsonian botanist writes book on his discoveries in the secret land of Myanmar

The Weeping Goldsmith, written as a first-person narrative, follows Botanist John Kress through nine years as he surveys Myanmar’s teak forests, bamboo thickets, timber plantations, rivers and mangroves to document its incredible botanical biodiversity.

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Mangroves research by Candy Feller, Smithsonian Environmental Research Center botanist

Follow botanist Candy Feller of the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center as she conducts field work on mangrove ecosystems at Carrie Bow Cay, a Smithsonian field research station in the Caribbean.

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Prehistoric pollination: Scorpionfly mouthparts fit tubular channels of gymnosperm cones

Smithsonian scientists and colleagues, however, have recently found evidence that gymnosperm plants shared an intricate pollination relationship with scorpionfly insects 62 million years before flowering plants appear in fossil records.

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Researchers compile colorful on-line guide to marine algae of Panama

“Our guide celebrates the beauty of some of the most attractive inhabitants of Panama’s undersea realm and provides an indispensable, easy-to-use tool for their identification,” say the Littlers.

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academic and careers

Medieval book is important resource for how plants were once collected, treated and used

Latinus 9333 is the Latin translation of the so-called Tacuinum sanitatis, a medieval handbook on wellness written in Arabic by the 11th-century physician ibn Butlan. It deals with factors influencing human health: from the air, the environment and food, to physical exercise and sexual activity.

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academic and careers

A well-defended territory is what some female hummingbirds find most attractive in a mate

What they observed was unique among all bird species: successful male caribs maintained and defended territories with nectar supplies that were two to five times greater than their daily needs and also isolated part of their crop for the exclusive feeding rights of visiting females.

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academic and careers

Amazon farmers who vanished centuries ago were remarkably innovative

This new research has revealed that in areas considered unsuitable for farming today, "pre-Columbian farmers constructed thousands of raised fields in the seasonally flooded coastal savannas of the Guianas.

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academic and careers

Transmitters unveil long-distance movements of orchid bees

Now, for the first time ever, researchers at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute are able to track the routes of these creatures by gluing tiny transmitters to the backs of individual bees.

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academic and careers

Slide Show: Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History is 100!

Since its doors first opened in 1910, the National Museum of Natural History has inspired curiosity and learning about the natural world and our place […]

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academic and careers

Scientists find excess nitrogen favors plants that respond poorly to rising CO2

Two grass species that had been relatively rare in the plots, Spartina patens and Distichlis spicata, began to respond vigorously to the excess nitrogen. Eventually the grasses became much more abundant. Nitrogen ultimately changed the composition of the ecosystem as well as its capacity to store carbon.

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academic and careers

Honeybees fascinate visitors at the National Zoological Park

Visits to the Smithsonian's National Zoo just became a little bit sweeter with the arrival of a new honeybee colony. With a hive made of glass in the Zoo's Pollinarium and full access to the outdoors, these bees are showing off the wondrous ways of their world.

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academic and careers

Tropical tree study shows interactions with neighbors plays an important role in tree survival

New results from a massive study at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute show that interactions among community members play an important role in determining which organisms thrive.

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