Scientific American has been published continuously since August 28, 1845 when it was founded by Rufus Porter[?]. In its first issue it styled itself "The Advocate of Industry and Enterprise, and Journal of Mechanical and other Improvements." On the front page of that first issue was the engraving of "Improved Rail-Road Cars". The commentary under the illustration gives the flavour of its style at the time.
Throughout its early years Scientific American put much emphasis on reports of what was going on at the patent office. It reported on a broad range of inventions that includes perpetual motion machines, an 1849 device for buoying vessels by one Abraham Lincoln, and the universal joint which now finds place in nearly every automobile manufactured. Any issue from the 19th century gives a fascinating insight into the progress of the industrial revolution in that time.
Whilst a well-respected magazine, it is not a peer-reviewed scientific journal in the sense of Nature or Communications of the ACM[?]; rather, it is a forum where scientific discoveries are explained to a wider audience (which often includes scientists working in other fields).
Scientific America published an encyclopedia called The Americana in the early 1900s.
Notable achievements and features have included:
Scientific American also produces a TV program on the PBS channel, hosted by Alan Alda.
See also: New Scientist
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