Ad
related to: history science and culture magazine covers youtube- Meet the Fire TV Family
See our devices for streaming your
favorite content and live TV.
- Explore Amazon Smart Home
Shop for smart home devices that
work with Alexa. See our guide too.
- Shop Groceries on Amazon
Try Whole Foods Market &
Amazon Fresh delivery with Prime.
- Shop Echo & Alexa Devices
Play music, get news, control your
smart home & more using your voice.
- Meet the Fire TV Family
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Cover of Carteles, November 29, 1931, drawn by Conrado Massaguer. Carteles was a Cuban magazine created by the famous brothers Oscar H. Massaguer and Conrado Walter Massaguer, who had already created the successful magazine Social. Carteles overtook Social, however, and gained the widest circulation of any magazine in Latin America. [1]
The cover of the October 1988 issue featured a photo of a large ivory portrait of a male, whose authenticity, particularly the alleged ice age provenance, has been questioned. [53] In 1999, the magazine was embroiled in the Archaeoraptor scandal, in which it purported to have a fossil linking birds to dinosaurs. The fossil was a forgery.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
Science magazines are read by non-scientists and scientists who want accessible information on fields outside their specialization. Articles in science magazines are sometimes republished or summarized by the general press. Horisont is the oldest continuously published general science magazine in Estonia. Cover image from 1967.
National Geographic logo. National Geographic is an American magazine that is noted for its cover stories and accompanying photography. [1] [2] [3] Throughout the 2000s National Geographic's cover stories showcased global historical events such as the 1906 San Francisco earthquake [4] and Hurricane Katrina. [5]
Smithsonian is a science and nature magazine (and associated website, SmithsonianMag.com). It is the official journal published by the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., although editorially independent from its parent organization. The first issue was published in 1970. [2]
The Science History Institute's magazine, Distillations, appeared in print three times a year until 2019, when content became digital-only. As an online resource, it continues to present stories about the history of science for a popular readership. Distillations first appeared in spring 2015, as a publication of the Chemical Heritage Foundation.
In 2011, the Columbia Journalism Review's "News Startups Guide" called Live Science "a purebred Web animal, primarily featuring one-off stories and photo galleries produced at high speed by its mostly young staffers, almost all of whom have journalism degrees" and noted that "If you are looking for resource-intensive expositions of global warming, for instance, or thickly narrated journeys ...