Distillations magazine

Unexpected Stories from Science’s Past

The Soapy Origins of a Sandalwood Smuggler

A war between police and a notorious outlaw riveted South India for more than a decade. At the conflict’s roots was a centuries-old saga of scarcity and control.

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Distillations articles reveal science’s powerful influence on our lives, past and present.

Woman in glasses standing beside lectern with a bowl in the foreground
Inventions & Discoveries

Interview: Jennifer Doudna

Distillations talks to the biochemist about the discovery of CRISPR-Cas9, the tool’s promise, and dangers of its misuse.

Photo illustration with main image being man in hat and handcuff, surrounded by other portraits and illustrations
People & Politics

Harry Gold: Spy in the Lab

How did a Philadelphia chemist wind up a Soviet spy?

illustration of William and Caroline Herschel
People & Politics

Making Space for Women in Astronomy

For centuries women have been looking at the stars despite earthly obstacles.

Arts & Culture

The Case of Continental Classroom

Before Bill Nye the Science Guy, there was Professor Harvey E. White of Continental Classroom.

black and white photo of pipes and fittings
People & Politics

Whose Knowledge Counts? Scientists with Cognitive Differences

Why emphasizing intellectual achievement and scientific “genius” harms scientists with intellectual disabilities—and the rest of us.

movie still showing a family scene
Arts & Culture

Where Are My Children? Public Health in the Movies

The silent movie Where Are My Children? is more than a century old, but its central question—who “deserves” access to reproductive rights—still resonates today.

Picture of shipping containers
Inventions & Discoveries

Armageddon’s Fingerprints

Around the world a network of detectives searches for evidence of illicit nuclear activity. Is it enough to keep us safe from a nuclear catastrophe?

head louse holding hair strands
Inventions & Discoveries

The Parasites in Our Past

Lice can tell us a lot about who we are and where we came from.

Environment & Nature

Harry versus the Volcano

Foul-mouthed, heavy-drinking eccentric Harry R. Truman became a folk hero for refusing to evacuate his home in the months before Mount St. Helens erupted. Where did he go once it did?

People & Politics

Baking Up a Storm

When crime and politics influenced American baking habits.

Health & Medicine

Exhuming the Flu

Remembering the Spanish flu 100 years later.

Environment & Nature

Nor Any Drop to Drink

Drought drove American pursuit of desalination in the mid-20th century. Now a changing climate has compelled nations around the world to embrace the double-eged technology.

Arts & Culture

Saving Old Movies

Old films are fragile, flammable, and frequently lost.

People & Politics

Through the Lens of Disability

What possibilities might we be ignoring when we unquestioningly privilege sight as the primary pathway to knowledge about the natural world?

Early Science & Alchemy

Snakes and Letters

An ancient work on toxicology gets a 16th-century makeover from a master of fonts.

Environment & Nature

The Folly of the Martian Back-Up Plan

Why resources spent building a colony on the red planet would be a waste of money.

Health & Medicine

Probing the Mysteries of Human Digestion

The strange, sometimes sickening things we’ve done to understand what goes on inside our guts.

Health & Medicine

Opioids’ Devastating Return

The latest painkiller revival has left a trail of bodies, with no end in sight.