Walt Disney's Hand-Drawn Map of Disneyland Just Sold for a Bonkers Price
The Disney fan army can’t get enough of Mickey Mouse and his magical empire.
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?
The Disney fan army can’t get enough of Mickey Mouse and his magical empire.
With the Great Barrier Reef under unprecedented environmental stress, a new report is raising the alarm in terms of its potential economic loss.
If David Lynch designed a planet, it would be Uranus.
A new study suggests old people getting it on is a good thing.
Xenomorphs should be the least of your worries.
Scientists at MIT present a fascinating new idea for how to electrically stimulate regions deep inside the brain.
They claim that evolution is “debatable, controversial, and too complicated for students.”
"If they had prospered in their objectives, it could have changed not only Chile’s history, but the history of the whole world."
Bad news if you were hoping to beat a drug test by blaming it on your breakfast.
The discovery shows that toxic substances of our own making have been around for a lot longer than we realised.
This new Forbes column from theoretical physicist and science blogger Sabine Hossenfelder means the public get to see the reality of science through live peer-review.
The supposed health food has turned into a pariah thanks to the American Heart Association reviewing existing evidence and deciding it advises against the oil’s use.
Scientists from York University in Toronto have since observed what they call “enhanced airglow events” where elements in the night sky release photons.
Australian scientists have developed a new efficient catalyst that converts carbon dioxide from the air into synthetic natural gas in a "clean" process, using solar energy.
Is someone keeping track of all these goddamn hypothetical planets?
These four boys are among the Simon Langton Grammar School for Boys’ latest recruits to join the Large Hadron Collider’s hundred-person MoEDAL (Monopole and Exotics Detector at the LHC, pronounced ‘meddle’) collaboration.