Video: A peek into the amazing world offered by Smithsonian Libraries
The Smithsonian Libraries offer a vast amount of resources to the general public. This video gives you a peek into the amazing world of discovery […]
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Giant panda Mei Xiang gives birth at Smithsonian’s National Zoo
Giant panda Mei Xiang (may-SHONG) gave birth to a cub at the Smithsonian’s National Zoo in Washington, D.C. at 5:32 p.m., Friday, Aug. 23. The […]
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Learn to use the Smithsonian Wild website of amazing animal photos!
Learn how to use the Smithsonian Wild website to find amazing camera trap photos of mammals from around the world
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American bison return to the Smithsonian’s National Zoo
In honor of its 125th anniversary, the Smithsonian’s National Zoo is once again home to American bison, the animal that began the Zoo’s living […]
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Meet the Smithsonian’s poop sleuth
Ever wonder what it’s like to be an endocrinologist at the National Zoo? Meet Sarah Putman, endocrinologist at the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute.
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Smithsonian X 3D – Exhibits
How 3D technology is used at the Smithsonian to create world class exhibits!
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Smithsonian Design Museum in NYC Reopens with High Tech Makeover
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum, the only museum in the U.S. devoted exclusively to design, reopens after a 3-year makeover with 60 percent more exhibition […]
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3-D imaging takes Smithsonian from Washington to the world
The Smithsonian has launched an ambitious project to scan millions of items and make them available to the world on a searchable database. CBS reporter […]
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On-line resources for Smithsonian Libraries
Here are some of the many resources the Smithsonian Libraries have to offer for Exploration, Encounter, Exchange in History
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First Look: The Smithsonian builds a dinosaur
How do you bring a nearly complete T. rex back to life? You send the fossils to Canada where craftsmen create a creature of steel. […]
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Where Dead Whales Go To Live: Smithsonian Whale Warehouse
Seeing a massive skeleton on display in a museum gallery is the last step in a long journey from living animal to educational specimen. Where […]
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Smithsonian Channel: Killer hornet war
A giant killer hornet war is waged between two colonies, and the resources, territories, and survival of a new generation are at stake. Watch the […]
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Eld’s Deer Fawn Born at the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute
Oct. 4, 2016—The Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute welcomed an Eld’s deer fawn Oct. 2 around 4:30 p.m. Both the fawn and her mom Sienna appear […]
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We are Smithsonian
We are the world’s largest museum, research and education complex. We are an active institution that opens new doors, analyzes big questions and searches to […]
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Time Travel With Smithsonian Paleontologist: Nick Pyenson
Meet Nick Pyenson, one of our paleontologists at the National Museum of Natural History. His job as a time traveler is to make discoveries about […]
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An Active Environment With Smithsonian Educator: Amy Homma
Meet Amy Homma, the Director of Digital Learning at Art Lab+. Learn how Smithsonian’s Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden has created a dynamic program to […]
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Smithsonian Secretary David Skorton on why he votes
Basque Dance Troupe “Aukeran” at Smithsonian Folklife Festival
Aukeran is a professional dance troupe from Basque country founded in 1997 by Edu Muruamendiaraz. The beautiful and graceful professional dancers have backgrounds in both […]
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Stephen Hawking Congratulates LIGO Team on its Smithsonian American Ingenuity Award
Click here to read more about the work of the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory. The Smithsonian has been celebrating innovation in American culture for more than […]
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Smithsonian starts program to help people restore storm-damaged heirlooms
A team from the Smithsonian is starting a pilot program to aid people in restoring their damaged family heirlooms. Click photo to learn more….
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Smithsonian Secretary David Skorton on USA Today TV
Meet Dana Tai Soon Burgess, Smithsonian Choreographer-in-residence
Known around the world for personal and culturally inspired choreography, Dana Tai Soon Burgess has been named the Smithsonian’s first choreographer-in-residence at the National Portrait […]
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Smithsonian volcanologist Elizabeth Cottrell explores Alaskan Volcanoes
Join Dr. Elizabeth Cottrell as she explores the volcanoes of Alaska’s Western Aleutian Islands.
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Posting Your Story to Smithsonian’s Museum on Main Street Website
Get a quick tutorial on how to upload a story about your local culture and experiences to the Smithsonian’s storytelling website, located www.museumonmainstreet.org Museum on […]
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A “day in the life” of the Smithsonian American Art Museum
Explore a “day in the life” of the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the nation’s first collection of American art and home to one of the […]
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Smithsonian staff rally to support African American History Museum after noose incident
Smithsonian staff gathered on Thursday, June 1 outside the National Museum of African American History and Culture to show their support and listen to Director […]
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Why the Smithsonian has world’s largest whale bone collection
Did you know the Smithsonian’s museum support center is home to the largest collection of whale bones EVER? Madeline Sofia from Joe’s Big Idea takes […]
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Meet the Smithsonian’s new maned wolf pups
Scientists in the US are helping to preserve this near-threatened species native to South America.
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Remote sensing of a Smithsonian forest with airborne LiDAR
The storage and flux of terrestrial carbon (C) is one of the most uncertain components of the global C budget and detailed quantification of forest […]
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How the Smithsonian moves space history
Here’s how the Smithsonian Institution is prepping the 9,000-pound capsule used during Apollo 11 for a two-year road trip.
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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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Happy Holidays from Smithsonian’s National Zoo
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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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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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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Smithsonian Folklife Festival: Armenian carpet-cutting ceremony
In Armenia, the completion of a carpet and cutting it from its loom is a significant rite of passion for young female weavers.
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Lacter: Covered California website doing better than federal one
The state's online registration for Covered California has been up for a couple of weeks, and reaction has been mixed.
Steve Julian: Business analyst, Mark Lacter, what's your take on how well Californians are getting into the Affordable Care Act?
Mark Lacter: It's hard to get a good read, Steve, because it's hard to measure the success of what is really a new marketplace. If you're basing it on the number of unique visitors coming to the Covered California website, well, then the program clearly has attracted lots of interest - they had almost a million visitors during the first week of eligibility. But, maybe a better measure would be the number of people whose applications actually have been received by the insurance companies that are going to handle the claims. If that's your measuring stick, then the numbers have been far smaller so far. Now, it's worth pointing out that California - and particularly L.A. County - have a higher percentage of households without insurance than other parts of the nation, and so you'd expect there to be lots of interest.
Julian: So the question, then, is how many folks turn into actual policyholders paying actual premiums each month.
Lacter: The truth is nobody knows, which is why state officials want to sign up as many people as possible in the early going when the program is getting so much attention. This is especially true for younger and healthier people who are needed to help offset the cost of caring for older and sicker people.
Julian: And, that's also why any computer glitch can be such a headache...
Lacter: That's right. Covered California did run into problems in the early going, but everybody agrees that things are going much better than the federal website, which is the default site used by folks in states that don't have their own program to oversee the health care laws. That federal site has been an utter disaster. So, by comparison, California is ahead of the game.
Julian: It's a work in progress, even here.
Lacter: Very much so. The California website still doesn't have a way for enrollees to find out which doctors and hospitals are included in each health plan. And, that's a big deal because insurance companies are limiting the options available as a way of keeping premiums low. So, it's possible that the doctor you had been using for your individual insurance plan will not be on the list of doctors that can be used for one of the cheaper plans. Of course, for someone who doesn't have any health coverage, none of that is likely to matter.
Julian: And then, there's the continued threat of a U.S. default...
Lacter: You know, Steve, this is like watching the beginning of a bad traffic accident in slow motion - and we're all pretty helpless to do anything about it. And, so are the financial markets, which are moving back and forth not based on what's going on with the economy or with any industry, but on the latest press conference out of Washington. One thing we do know is that if the nation does go into quote-unquote default - and we're not even sure what that might mean - but if Wall Street and somehow declares this a major crisis, it's going to be bad.
Julian: Who gets hit?
Lacter: It'll impact anyone who has a retirement account, any business wanting to borrow money, and potentially it's going to impact the budgeting of the state. You know, one of the things we were reminded of during the Great Recession was how reliant California has been on higher-income individuals who make a lot of their money through the stock market and other investments. So, when those folks do well - as they have been over the last year - the state coffers will do well. And when they don't, as was the case in 2008 and 2009, the state takes a huge hit because there's not enough tax dollars coming in. Gov. Brown and others have tried to lessen the reliance on those top tiers - so far without success.
Julian: And the state's budget situation is so much better than it was a year or two ago.
Lacter: That's the real pity. And, even if the House and Senate reach a temporary agreement on the debt ceiling, it's just a matter of weeks or months before another deadline crops up - and more uncertainty for the financial markets. I guess Chick Hearn would have called this nervous time.
Mark Lacter writes for Los Angeles Magazine and pens the business blog at LA Observed.com.
This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org.
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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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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Video: Smithsonian horticulturalist Janet Draper discusses the pollination of the pelican flower
Flowers are usually associated with butterflies, but not the Dutchman’s Pipe (Aristolochia grandiflora). This deciduous vine, native to Brazil, has large flowers that emit an odor of decaying flesh, which attracts flies and beetles.
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Remarkable ethnobotany collections of Edward Palmer highlighted in new Smithsonian Website
Obsessive in his collecting and emotionally invested in contributing to science and perpetuating knowledge, Palmer lived the adventurous yet nomadic life of a collector.
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Smithsonian scientists to help identify and eradicate invasive species in Alaskan waters
The Smithsonian Environmental Research Center in Edgewater, Md., and the Alaska Sea Grant Program of the University of Alaska, Fairbanks, were recently identified as the […]
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Cool science is being carried out on a Smithsonian island in the Panama Canal
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On the Chesapeake Bay, Smithsonian plant physiologist Bert Drake has been studying one wetland’s response to climate change for more than two decades.
Smithsonian plant physiologist Bert Drake has studied one wetland's response to climate change for more than two decades. He gives a tour of the field experiment and explains some of the findings.
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Tragedy, towers, and romance at the Smithsonian
This 1950 Federal Bureau of Investigation photo shows T. Dale Stewart, M.D., Curator of Physical Anthropology, in his office at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of […]
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NASA to help Smithsonian botanists track northern creep of Florida mangroves
Candy Feller, senior ecologist at the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center in Edgewater, Md., will lead an effort to track more than 100 miles of Florida mangrove forests that are encroaching on salt marshes to the north.
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Smithsonian paleoecologist Conrad Labandeira talks about how he became a scientist and why he loves his work
Can a tendency to get distracted lead to a career in science? It did for paleoecologist Conrad Labandeira. Working on his family's farm, he would find himself falling into a study of insect life in the fields. "If you go after what interests you," he says, "the rest will always fall into place."
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The small whorled pogonia
The small-whorled pogonia is a plain, endangered orchid that inhabits the hollows of Virginia, and survives only in collaboration with a particular type of fungus […]
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