New Mexico Sheriff Demands Answers, Calls FBI 'Chicken Shit' Over Handling of Mysterious Observatory Closure
Sheriff Benny House is still aggravated and concerned about how the situation has played out.
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?
Sheriff Benny House is still aggravated and concerned about how the situation has played out.
A new study suggests you should skip the black and silver and go with the hue or shade that really speaks to you.
New UK research seems to provide direct evidence of how this damage can happen.
In fact, it might even raise their risk of dying early of certain things, like cancer.
They’re FINE, we promise.
Next year, scientists will adopt the newest, internationally standardised frame of reference to help locate things in space.
This big brown splotch is another reminder of the complex atmospheric processes happening on our Solar System’s largest planet.
These cryovolcanoes spit out around 10 thousand cubic metres per year of ice from the depths of the asteroid Ceres.
When signed into law, the bill will outline a 10-year plan to push forward applications using the counterintuitive science of subatomic particles.
According to an official statement, the closure was associated with "an on-going law enforcement investigation of criminal activity."
Nothing, in this world, is above suspicion—not even tasteless bran flakes.
Other reports also suggest that, worldwide, a third of all people are either overweight or obese.
Plus workplace voodoo dolls, road rage, using roller coasters to pass kidney stones, and more.
Details are scarce, but it seems like the company is still intent on delivering private individuals, rather than just cargo and professional astronauts, into space.
Despite far outlasting expectations, losing Opportunity would be a loss for present-day science.
Plastic products that boast of being “BPA-free” aren’t necessarily any safer for us, suggests a new study.