How Climate Helped Shape Your Nose
Why Americans Flocked to Catch a Glimpse of Hitler's Car
The Idea of Surgeons Washing Their Hands Is Only 150 Years Old
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Netflix Will Finish Orson Welles’ Last Film
A Missing Oxford Comma Just Changed the Course of a Court Case
The First Description of Allergies Was Published On This Day in 1844
Contest Winners Capture the Eerie Beauty of Medical Imagery
These Designs Showcase the Provocative World of Native Fashion
Hot Food, Fast: The Home Microwave Oven Turns 50
These Bold Illustrations Celebrate the Incredible Contributions of Women in Science
How Researchers Are Beginning to Gently Probe the Science Behind ASMR
Utah Chooses New State Works of Art
Doctors Warn That Climate Change Makes People Sick
From Air & Space
The Ultimate Space Telescope Would Use the Sun as a Gravitational Lens
Spiders Eat Up to 800 Million Tons of Prey Each Year
Check Out the Most Detailed Tornado Simulation So Far
In 1827, the first African-American owned and operated newspaper in the United States, Freedom's Journal, began publishing. "We wish to plead our own cause. Too long have others spoken for us," wrote Samuel Cornish and John B. Russwurm, co-editors of the weekly. Read how the burgeoning black press became part of the long, proud tradition of journalism in the United States.
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