Doctors Remove 132-Pound Nightmare Tumour From US Woman's Abdomen
It's the sort of body horror that would give John Carpenter and David Cronenberg nightmares.
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?
It's the sort of body horror that would give John Carpenter and David Cronenberg nightmares.
It’s an unhappy result, but such is science.
Lava streams continue to flow from what is believed to be at least 10 fissures that have opened up in the once serene neighbourhood of Leilani Estates.
The discovery of a butchered rhino fossil shows that so-called archaic humans were romping around the islands of southeast Asia 400,000 years before our species even existed.
Astrology is not science, but taking a look at the real constellation your zodiac sign is named after is a great way to see some of the incredible objects that populate our universe.
Before a robot is deemed ready to go to Mars, it needs to prove itself on the testing grounds of Earth.
In a scientific first, researchers have used an MRI scanner to study the brains of Nile crocodiles.
Yet another study claiming to show a connection between cancer and mobile phones is making the rounds again.
The governor of Hawaii has declared a local state of emergency in the vicinity of the Mount Kilauea volcano following an eruption late yesterday.
Scientists have created time crystals - structures where atoms prefer to exist in certain intervals of time - out of ammonium dihydrogen phosphate, a chemical commonly found in fertilisers and fire extinguishers.
European mistletoe seems to survive without a protein indispensable for life called “complex I,” two independent teams of researchers reported yesterday.
I think I was a plant in a past life.
I’m not sure I found out anything especially useful. And I am fairly certain that poor Avalanche would agree it wasn’t worth the hassle.
The team hope their findings can ease concerns that women taking birth control might have about the drug’s effects.
The research could possibly even help explain how melanomas, the cancers that affect melanocytes, avoid detection by our immune system.
Scientists with NASA have taken a new look at the data collected during that historic encounter, providing tantalising new details.