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The wondrous world of science

Last month, the Wellcome Collection announced the Wellcome Images Awards. The winners uncover the beauty and secrets of our world. On the press release, Dr Adam Ruthford said: “Images are one of the…

Spacebound bacteria provide a key to microbial virulence

Salmonella has made a trip on a space shuttle to help researchers understand diseases on Earth.

And the winner is…

The Abel Prize has been awarded to the famous American mathematician John Milnor (b. 1931).

Cold climate the key to dinosaur feathers

Chilly winters in the Cretaceous could explain the number of feathered dinosaurs in China.

The science behind tsunamis

The location and strength of the earthquake that struck Japan on March 11 determined the power of the tsunami.

Up close and personal with Saturn and its moons

NASA’s Cassini Spacecraft has taken pictures of Tethys and Dione. Both moons were discovered in 1684 by Giovanni Domenico Cassini. 327 years later, we know that both moons have icy surfaces composed almost…

Francois leaf-eating monkey born at Taronga Zoo

A bright orange baby has joined the family.

Experts say explosions at Fukushima Daiichi are not signs of another Chernobyl

Experts are comparing the nuclear incidents in Japan to Three Mile Island, not The China Syndrome.

Is there a dinosaur in your fridge?

A new study published in the journal Fungal Genetics and Biology shows that this brownish mushroom has been around since the Cretaceous period.

Teshekpuk Lake has highest density of breeding birds in Arctic Alaska

Nature is putting a lot of eggs in a very cold basket.

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