This New Mexican Cave Spider is Ridiculous
We are never going into caves ever again.
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?
We are never going into caves ever again.
On Thursday, for the first time ever, the FDA gave a DNA testing giant—23andMe—the green light to market tests for 10 diseases or conditions directly to consumers.
Researchers, who published their work today in the journal Science, suspected coeliac disease had some environmental component based on lots of evidence.
When a child is born deaf, and then receives cochlear implants, learning to talk is a process of learning how to associate the sounds they can newly hear with the sounds they are able to make with their mouths.
If only every medical test was as simple as eating what you probably already eat for breakfast.
We’re happy to have another friend out there to keep us company, even though everyone dies alone anyway.
Japanese scientists are browsing through ancient documents to see what kinds of solar storms folks living back then saw and recorded.
Everything on Earth, spare a few particles, is matter. So where’s all the antimatter?
Our theories aren’t ready for a complete shakeup, but our current understanding of galaxy formation doesn’t explain how this strange mass of stuff could have formed.
Offering a $3.50 sacrifice at the edge of the lake wasn't an option then.
You might not know this, but we’re in the midst of an insect shape-studying renaissance.
Just without the the cloning and Jurassic Park parts.
When the Isles first split from the rest of Europe hundreds of thousands years ago, things were considerably more violent than they are today.
Imagine a biosensing contact lens that can tell when your blood sugar is getting too low, or if there’s something wrong with one of your organs.
Scientists have been able to study images and video of one these elusive happenings—called blue jets—and the results are as spellbinding as lightning itself.