Watch 40 Years of Icebergs Breaking off Antarctica
Climate visualisation specialists Pixel Movers and Makers have taken more than 40 years of data on the migration of icebergs and set it in motion.
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?
Climate visualisation specialists Pixel Movers and Makers have taken more than 40 years of data on the migration of icebergs and set it in motion.
The findings could be particularly helpful to people with severe diseases like chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and cystic fibrosis.
After several years of discussion, scientists have settled on Oxia Planum, which could be a prime spot to determine whether life ever existed on Mars.
There are also troves of wooden statues and a rare collection of mummified scarab beetles.
The largest planet in our Solar System also happens to be one of the most beautiful.
Scientists have now identified a startling variety of the toxic emissions produced during the 3D printing process.
These geeky compounds are just for fun. But fun chemistry is fun to read about.
Earth’s oldest soil could be tucked away in an ancient rock outcrop in Greenland, according to new research.
It’s a stark reminder of the Sun’s potential to disrupt our technological activities in unexpected ways.
Burket's three-in-one warbler is an ornithological one of a kind.
A decade before Adolf Hitler rose to power, famed physicist Albert Einstein was already sensing imminent peril for his country and his own welfare.
A copy of his doctoral thesis, Properties of Expanding Universes, sold for over half a million alone.
According to a new study, every infectious disease, including polio, gonorrhoea, and even HIV, is a seasonal one.
It’s the oldest known case of lead exposure in hominin remains, which presents the question: How could this have possibly happened so long ago?
An experiment using intense laser pulses has allowed scientists to watch plants produce oxygen from water as part of photosynthesis in real time.
It looks like NASA will offer the billionaire entrepreneur and physicist its help on the first-ever private deep-space mission.