Shampoos, Perfumes, and Other Cosmetics Send Thousands of Kids to A&E Every Year
An estimated 64,686 children five or younger between 2002 to 2016 had gone to hospital with an injury caused by a personal care product.
While the bread and butter of Gizmodo UK is in the bits and bytes of technology, we have a lot of fun in the off-topic areas, with many of the stories being filed in the WTF category. Bookmark this page for the sillier stories, from ridiculous examples of body-art, to... sausages made of skittles?
An estimated 64,686 children five or younger between 2002 to 2016 had gone to hospital with an injury caused by a personal care product.
Entomologist Zachary DeVries is fighting for a world where vulnerable people aren’t just left to fend for themselves against destructive insect pests.
Nobody messes with the king. Well, except for the relentless passing of time.
Our old friend Boaty recently did some serious sciencing around Antarctica.
The crater is located in the Valles Marineris region near the equator, and was formed at some point between September 2016 and February 2019.
And it reveals a stark warming trend nearly everywhere.
It's the closest a spacecraft has ever orbited a body in the Solar System.
This exotic frozen moon may have more in common with Earth than we ever imagined.
The same way a bat can spot obstacles or dinner using echolocation, this approach can visualise unseen objects using the echos it generates.
This aesthetically unpleasant but genuinely promising medical treatment may come with more serious risks than previously thought.
If the study’s conclusions hold true under further scrutiny, the results might have important implications.
The settlement, located near Whittlesey, is known as the “Pompeii of Britain” owing to its remarkable state of preservation.
Scientists plan to make the most of it.
Can humans truly ditch clocks?
The new tool is designed to both detect when an image has been manipulated, and reverse the changes to reveal the original image.
After a meticulous eight-year search, the long-lost 'Snoopy' module, which has been drifting in space for 50 years, may be lost no more.