Celebrating 170 Years of Scientific American
From world-changing inventions to discoveries that shaped our understanding the natural world, a look back at the evolution of the oldest continuously published magazine in the U.S.
Aug 28, 2015
More In This Report
- Scientific American Volume 310, Issue 2
Scientific American Covers Reveal a Shift from Practical to Provocative
- Celebrating 170 Years of Scientific American
Scientific American, on the Move
170 Years, 11 locations—A map of Scientific American's wanderings around Manhattan - Science Images
Happy 125th Birthday, Statue of Liberty!
From Scientific American's Anecdotes from the Archive blog: The Statue of Liberty. She is a symbol of freedom, an icon of New York City, and today is her birthday. - Features
A Century of Flight: How Scientific American Helped the "Aeroplane" Get Off the Ground [Slideshow]
Scientific American observes the 100th anniversary of a competition that would bring manned flight to the masses, spawn the aviation industry, and forever change the way we live and travel - Features
Scientific American’s Owner Built the First New York Subway [Excerpt]
One of America’s first attempts at underground transportation was powered pneumatically, built covertly—and illegal - Redirects
About Scientific American
Key facts, quotes, awards and company history - Redirects
50, 100 & 150 Years Ago
Innovation and discovery as chronicled in past issues of Scientific American - Scientific American Volume 112, Issue 23
Our Seventieth Anniversary, The Greatest Ten Years of Invention, The Super-Battle-Cruiser
- Scientific American Volume 74, Issue 19
Our Fiftieth Anniversary Prize Essay Competition
Multimedia
- Video
Neil deGrasse Tyson, Scientific American Fan
When the famed astrophysicist needed to select a college, he turned to the pages of Scientific American for help. Years later, our profile about him turned out to be his favorite.
Editors Picks
- SA Visual
On Scientific American's 170th Anniversary, a Nod to Founder Rufus Porter
- @ScientificAmerican
15 Surprises about Scientific American
Scientific American's parent company, Macmillan Science & Education strives to be both a place where curious minds gather together to achieve great things for our customers—and where we can, working together as a company, be more than the sum of our parts. - SA Visual
Evolution of the Scientific American Logo
Scientific American's logotype has undergone subtle shifts, large leaps and occasional bouts of nostalgia. The image series below outlines the history of the publication's identity, starting with its debut in August 1845 as weekly devoted primarily to inventions.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please leave a comment-- or suggestions, particularly of topics and places you'd like to see covered