It Looks Like There's a Second, Bigger Impact Crater Under Greenland's Ice
If confirmed, this crater would be the 22nd largest on Earth.
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?
If confirmed, this crater would be the 22nd largest on Earth.
They might not be edible, but these berries have a lot to teach us.
It’s kind of cool to see this from an era when the car was actually seen as a progressive mode of transportation.
Scientists think they might be able to use gravitational waves to detect quark matter produced in neutron star collisions.
Makes the tunnels look pretty, too.
The SPHEREx mission will use a space-based observatory to study the early conditions of the Universe and hunt for the celestial ingredients required for life.
The discovery adds to our knowledge of how these enigmatic beasts evolved on the African continent.
The six-legged AntBot borrows its navigational skills as well as its name from the tiny picnic-loving insect.
The company is hoping to start removing radioactive fuel in earnest by 2021, but the clean-up is expected to take decades.
Scientists say this opens the door to new insights about how these spiders lived and hunted.
An exploration team financed by the Paul Allen estate discovered the sunken aircraft carrier near the Solomon Islands in late January.
Sand may be the key to helping rebuild as natural disasters and rising sea levels erode coastlines.
This may change how mothers approach the breastfeeding vs pumping issue, although the researchers behind the study say not to worry.
Primitive life, it would seem, was eager to get going.
RIP, little guy.
That said, in some ways it was empowering to think about my food choices on the road (or at least that’s what I’m telling myself).