Talking of naked mole rats...
BFS Man via Wikipedia Commons.Social animals, naked mole rats live in colonies of around 60 individuals, but groups of as much as 300 are not uncommon. They have a single queen, and the workers pull...
View ArticleSnake acrobatics
By Pavel Kirillov via WikiCommons.Brown tree snakes make a lasso with their tails to help them climb up wide trees. A non-indigenous invasive species in Guam, scientists think that this climbing...
View ArticlePlastic waste and the pandemic
Our use of plastic is changing worldwide – and not for the better. Many governments with bans or restrictions on the consumption of single-use plastics have withdrawn the bans and, during the COVID-19...
View ArticleTransphytoism
You’ve heard of transhumanism? The concept of modifying humans with technology to make ourselves stronger and more able. Some people have argued that that’s exactly what prosthetics are, whilst others...
View ArticleMoving moss
In glacial landscapes across the world, small balls of moss form, oval in shape, and tumble simultaneously as the glaciers melt, as if moving in a herd. Known as “glacier mice”, these moss balls are...
View ArticleWhat has Juno found on Jupiter? Part I – Water and weather
One of Juno’s findings has been some measurements of the Great Red Spot – a giant Jovian storm that could fit three Earth-sized planets inside it. Although Juno has the power to image up to 350 km deep...
View ArticleWhat has Juno found on Jupiter? Part II – It’s magnetic
Built with a 20 radius and designed to spin, Juno is made to measure the magnetic field of Jupiter. Thanks to Juno, we now know that the planet’s dipole is the opposite way round (North and South) to...
View ArticleWielding (quantum) fields!
Quantum field theory takes an infinite number of field configurations and add them up with the proper weighting to come to a single conclusion. The Standard Model is one well-known example, but this...
View ArticleThe cannibal in the ocean
I’ve just learnt about a new shark – Orthacanthus– and maybe it’s Latin name will give you a clue as to why I hadn’t heard of it before: it’s extinct. But even when animals are long gone, the mysteries...
View ArticleGreen ammonia
Ammonia may be a chemical you don't think about very much – but, perhaps, you should...75-90% of all the ammonia made is used to make fertiliser, which is used to grow 50% of global food. Other...
View ArticleWhy do Narwhals have tusks?
Narwhals, the unicorns of the sea, have large tusks (which are actually large canine teeth) protruding from their foreheads. Each tusk holds 10 million nerve endings. But what do they do? Narwhals have...
View ArticleDéjà vu
I’m thinking of anaglyphs: those blue-green offset images: you put the glasses on, your brain brings the colours together, and suddenly you see a crisp, 3D image. Anaglyph: planet and moon. Reimund...
View ArticleCo-sleeping: time to talk
Monkey baby-carrying. User 825545 via Pixabay.Co-sleeping has been demonised by SIDS networks because evidence suggests that it correlates with higher levels of unexplained infant deaths. However, in...
View ArticleThe plant-eating shark
Sharks are normally carnivorous, but there appears to be one that bucks the trend. The bonnethead. The bonnethead shark eats seagrass, and scientists think it may be omnivorous. But not everyone...
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