Food Sensitivities Are Real and You Should Take Them Seriously
If avoiding a certain food makes you feel more comfortable, less sick, or just all-around better, then there’s no shame in that.
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 avoiding a certain food makes you feel more comfortable, less sick, or just all-around better, then there’s no shame in that.
First detected in 2002, fast radio bursts continue to mystify astronomers.
Operation Isabela seeks to restore the ecological balance to these famous islands.
24 groups of genes have been identified that could be associated with monogamy across several different species.
Though contact with the satellite has been lost, it continues to transmit scientific data to the Astro Space Centre.
Seabirds with GPS could be an unexpectedly functional new part of our Earth-monitoring network.
At the end of its life, our Sun could end up as a crystal—and physicists now have observational evidence to back up that theory.
Watching how a black hole sucks up matter from a nearby companion star could help researchers better understand how these mystifying objects evolve.
It’s a new year, and the world has its first new species of shark in 2019.
Eight days after its historic landing on the far side of the Moon, China’s Chang’e 4 lander has captured its first panoramic image.
Archaeologists are trying to figure out why so many bodies at a 1,700-year-old site in Suffolk, England, were buried alongside their decapitated heads.
The researchers behind this want to turn the humble tomato into "a biofactory, with potential industrial and pharmaceutical applications."
"The parallels with Darwin’s illness are remarkable."
Things are going swimmingly.
Getting insanely high is, apparently, a rich intercontinental tradition going back tens of thousands of years.
Many suspected big trouble ahead for the rogue scientist, but this is even worse than we thought.