Jeff Bezos Reveals Lunar Lander Designed for 'Sustained Human Presence on the Moon'
Aims to put astronauts onto the Moon within the next five years.
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?
Aims to put astronauts onto the Moon within the next five years.
"If companies like Coca-Cola are secretly killing studies and there’s no trace of them, then any knowledge that might be important for public health also gets killed."
These hums are important because of their potential to interfere with scientific research, including the work done by seismologists and even particle physicists.
Researchers believe these substances may have been used for shamanic or other ritual purposes.
It calls for wide-scale improvements in how scientists do their work.
Not only is it exciting; it’s necessary.
Don’t worry—the NASA probe is just fine, and managed to produce some cool findings in the process.
The scrappy Suskityrannus was just slightly longer than the skull of a fully grown T. rex.
The experiment aims to fight back against the negative influence of microgravity on the muscles and bones of astronauts during long-duration missions.
The discovery of this now-famous fossil by the monk is an interesting tale, but it presents some serious obstacles for scientists.
Humanity has a choice between letting go of nearly 13 per cent of all species or living in balance with nature - a choice that will largely determine our fate as well.
The intriguing discovery suggests an early settlement of South America by humans, but not everyone is convinced by the new evidence.
By re-conceptualising Alzheimer’s disease, researchers hope to better understand the disorder and develop successful treatments.
Agency engineers determined that the supplier in question doctored test results, swapped out measurements, and altered testing conditions in order to move shoddy products.
The genetic diversity of these horned whales is astonishingly low, which is ordinarily a harbinger of extinction - yet they've been thriving for about a million years.
Could the right skull implant help us escape the ROYGBIV paradigm?