Scientific American
Scientific American is a popular science magazine, published (first weekly and later monthly) since August 28, 1845, making it the oldest continuously published magazine in the United States. It brings articles about new and innovative research to the non-scientific audience.
Scientific American Media
"Men of Progress", published by the magazine in 1862, showing American inventors such as Samuel Morse, Samuel Colt, Cyrus McCormick, Charles Goodyear, Peter Cooper, and others
Scientific American Office, New York, 37 Park Row, 1859
Scientific American early office at 361 Broadway in Manhattan
Scientific American Office at the Woolworth Building, New York, 1915, built in 1913 by Frank Winfield Woolworth
The Scientific American building at 24-26 West 40th Street, commissioned by Munn and Co. in 1924
American compressed air locomotive used in boring the Rove Tunnel, Southern France
British Army reconnaissance airboat on the Tigris River during the Mesopotamian Campaign of World War I
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN SUPPLEMENT No. 1100 January 30, 1897 featuring Canet naval guns for the Greek ironclads
Other websites
- Online edition of Scientific American with partially free access to the current issue.
- Online archive (not free) of the issues from 1993 to the present.
- Online archive of Scientific American between 1846 and 1869.
- "Scientific American, on season 1". PBS. Scientific American Frontiers. Chedd-Angier Production Company. 1990–1991. Archived from the original on 2006.