It’s more than beaches, favelas and that Duran Duran song
The ambitious museum looks at where humankind is headed—and asks how they'll live in a post-climate-change world
History and legend collide in Mexico’s Pueblos Mágicos
From Winnie the Pooh's 90th birthday to the National Park Service's centennial, you won't want to miss out on these once-in-a-lifetime events
Each November, the Aymara people honor their special bond with the helpful spirits of the deceased
Step in the footprints of giants on "dinosaur highways"
Through weaving, the women of Ausangate, Peru, pass down the traditions of their ancestors
Smithsonian Journeys Travel Quarterly: Inca Road
Vilcabamba is an idyllic little town—and that's its problem
Smithsonian Journeys Travel Quarterly: Inca Road
Leave room in your suitcase for these irresistible items
Smithsonian Journeys Travel Quarterly: Inca Road
Take a peek inside Jiménez's visual journals
Smithsonian Journeys Travel Quarterly: Inca Road
From inside stone palaces and atop sacred mountaintops, the Inca dead continued to wield incredible power over the living
Smithsonian Journeys Travel Quarterly: Inca Road
Among sacred mountains, in a city where spells are cast and potions brewed, the otherworldly is everyday
Farmers carried 500 dazzling flower designs through the streets of Medellín, Colombia
At these beaches, splash around with some more unusual creatures
Smithsonian Journeys Travel Quarterly: Inca Road
The cliffside Skylodge hotel dangles 1,300 feet above the ground
Brightly colored parrots of the western Amazon basin display a behavior not seen anywhere else
Smithsonian Journeys Travel Quarterly: Inca Road
Chile's northern coast offers an ideal star-gazing environment with its lack of precipitation, clear skies and low-to-zero light pollution
Smithsonian Journeys Travel Quarterly: Inca Road
To journey here is to roam through almost six thousand years of civilization, to one of the places where the human enterprise began
Smithsonian Journeys Travel Quarterly: Inca Road
Native to northern Peru and southern Ecuador, this tiny and rapidly vanishing tomato boasts outsized influence on world gastronomy
Smithsonian Journeys Travel Quarterly: Inca Road
For a new exhibition, a Smithsonian curator conducted oral histories with contemporary indigenous cultures to recover lost Inca traditions
Page 2 of 6