These Hawaiian Stick Spiders Have a Profound Case of Evolutionary Déjà Vu
Darwin’s On the Origin of Species: standing the test of time for 160 years—and counting.
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?
Darwin’s On the Origin of Species: standing the test of time for 160 years—and counting.
I hope you aren’t making nuclear weapons in your garage. If you are, your bricks know what you’re doing.
If successful the power plant would be more efficient, and more importantly, much cleaner, than current methods of energy production.
Scientists are using the gene-editing technique CRISPR to make mosquitoes less susceptible to the parasite that ultimately causes malaria in humans.
A lifelong cycling habit could give an 80-year-old the immune system of a 20-something.
these diamonds contain water frozen into a special kind of ice crystal formed under heavy pressures.
The bag of hands was discovered on an island near Khabarovsk, a city of 590,000 in southeastern Russia close to the Chinese border.
The study is the latest to indicate activity trackers aren’t doing a great job at measuring at least some kinds of activity.
Trump has seemingly flip-flopped on his stance on elephant hunting and the importation of African elephant trophies.
After spending much of the 20th century relegated to the dustbin of quack medicine, leeches are now enjoying a renaissance in the doctor’s office.
Submit your name and it will be included in a memory card that will fly aboard the Parker Solar Probe spacecraft.
It seems they literally paint a mental picture from a scent.
New work helps explain why tattoos last a lifetime, and offers hope for those who wish their ink wouldn’t.
The smoking gun in this case is the clear-cut presence of a landslide deposit directly above the object in question.
For termites, the first line of defence is made of grans and granddads.
Researchers found a previously unidentified a network of gas around the nebula organised in relatively thin, tangled filaments.