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This “drop-in” tour highlights the science of natural dyes and textiles, the technology behind synthetic clothing, and the impact of fashion on human health and the environment.
The 2024 Cain Conference will explore how the stories of diverse scientists can empower young girls and people of color to see themselves as valuable contributors to the STEM fields.
From Rachel Carson to ACT UP, explore how scientists and activists have shaped discovery and created change.
Drop in for a tour highlighting the central role of women in shaping chemistry and the material sciences throughout history.
Gina Surita examines the gendered dynamics of the joint research program that developed between Prague-born, Nobel Prize-winning biochemists.
Join us in our museum EVERY SATURDAY for a family-friendly program that highlights strange and surprising stories from the history of science!
Join us in our museum EVERY SATURDAY for a family-friendly program that highlights strange and surprising stories from the history of science!
Join us in our museum EVERY SATURDAY for a family-friendly program that highlights strange and surprising stories from the history of science!
Join us in our museum EVERY SATURDAY for a family-friendly program that highlights strange and surprising stories from the history of science!
Join us in our museum EVERY SATURDAY for a family-friendly program that highlights strange and surprising stories from the history of science!
Join us in our museum EVERY SATURDAY for a family-friendly program that highlights strange and surprising stories from the history of science!
Join us in our museum EVERY SATURDAY for a family-friendly program that highlights strange and surprising stories from the history of science!
Join us in our museum EVERY SATURDAY for a family-friendly program that highlights strange and surprising stories from the history of science!
Join us in our museum EVERY SATURDAY for a family-friendly program that highlights strange and surprising stories from the history of science!
In this course Lisa Berry Drago will lead us through the first 150 years of manufactured dyes, offering a behind-the-scenes look at the curation of the BOLD exhibition.
In this course Roger Turner will show how the Nobel Prize can be an entry point for more inclusive stories about the people who work in science.
Institute staff will be on hand at the 5th annual celebration of the mighty Delaware with fun, water-themed activities and giveaways.
Nobel laureate Roald Hoffmann shares an untold story about science and immigration.
Join us in celebrating the opening of our newest exhibition, BOLD: Color from Test Tube to Textile.
In this four-part Roundtable course, James Voelkel will cover the period in astronomy surrounding Copernicus’s proposal that the earth revolves around the sun.
WHYY News’ Climate Desk and the Science History Institute invite you to an evening of climate-related games and conversation.
Join the Institute’s David J. Caruso for a three-part online course on military medicine during the Spanish–American War and World War I.
From plastics circularity in healthcare to changing modes of recycling, the 2023 T. T. Chao Symposium on Innovation revealed new perspectives on plastics.
Learn how genetics-based tools can help expand our knowledge of aquatic insect communities.
Yury Gogotsi discusses the multitude of applications offered by MXenes, the fastest growing family of nanomaterials.
César de la Fuente and Michael Mahan delve into AI-assisted antibiotic drug development.
This event has been canceled.
Nobel laureate and Stanford professor Carolyn Bertozzi presents the 2023 Ullyot Public Affairs Lecture.
Join us in our museum EVERY SATURDAY for a family-friendly program that highlights strange and surprising stories from the history of science!
Join us in our museum EVERY SATURDAY for a family-friendly program that highlights strange and surprising stories from the history of science!