Cleaning Your Baby’s Dummy by Sucking on It Prevents Allergies, New Research Suggests
Mothers who clean dummies by sucking on them have infants with a lower allergic response, according to new research.
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?
Mothers who clean dummies by sucking on them have infants with a lower allergic response, according to new research.
This galactic collision looks an awful lot like a craft going where no man has ever gone before.
This is a digital camera in every sense of the word — just not one you can take pictures of your dinner with.
Four NASA spacecrafts witnessed the spectacle in July of last year.
Scientists this week released a conceptual design report for a next-generation particle accelerator in China, which would serve as a “Higgs boson factory,” as its proponents have called it.
Roughly the size of Paris, it’s now among the 25 biggest asteroid craters on Earth.
Low-carb diets don’t necessarily require the consumption of a tonne of meat.
Airsoft guns may wind up being the critical weapons that stop future invasions on snake-free islands.
It sounds like the perfect science-fiction apocalypse, but thankfully the reality of the situation isn’t quite so dire.
According to NASA, this is probably the last that Earth scientists will ever learn about the object.
Research continues on these bones to study what the bird was like and how it evolved.
Its relative closeness to Earth makes it an important world that scientists may soon be able to take a picture of directly.
For nearly 100 years, scientists haven’t been able to agree on the origins of this strange, now-extinct monkey - until now.
“These findings imply that the first peoples...had a whole continent to themselves and they were travelling great distances at breathtaking speed.”
"It’s likely that we may not even realise when we’ve reached points of no return until it is too late."