What's the Most Dangerous Food of All Time?
If you like eating, and also enjoy being alive, you might want to take these analyses to heart.
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 you like eating, and also enjoy being alive, you might want to take these analyses to heart.
Robert Ballard, the oceanographer who led the American team that found the Titanic, is finally allowed to tell the newly-declassified story of what really happened in 1985.
It’s as good a reason as any to look at the sky!
The 1,500-year-old Pumapunku temple in western Bolivia is considered a crowning achievement of Mesoamerican architecture, yet no one knows what the original structure actually looked like. Until now.
The precise location of NASA’s InSight lander within Elysium Planitia is now known, thanks to images captured by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.
According to the report, Johnson & Johnson knew for decades that its products at times contained carcinogenic asbestos, but did everything possible to keep its findings shrouded from the public.
A startup based in Maryland has released and tested an impressive new quantum computer that demonstrates the power of an occasionally overlooked quantum computing architecture.
The plan could scare some scientists straight—but the potential for abuse is very real.
They’re worth remembering, even if just to lift your sorry, sad spirits.
This mission could serve as a proxy for future expeditions to the ice-covered moons of Jupiter and Saturn—moons that could potentially harbour alien life.
A group of entrepreneurs and researchers think we better start talking ethics now.
Yesterday's launch represents a major step towards commercial flights of SpaceShipTwo.
The goal is to help spur a radical decrease in carbon pollution needed to avoid the worst impacts of climate change.
With so many potential points of failure, it’s a relief to see this project get off to such a smooth start.
This man's body was speared and clubbed prior to burial, in what is now a fascinating Iron Age mystery.
This whole geoengineering idea has become suddenly, frighteningly mainstream.