Who Needs Stars When You Can Gaze at Spiders Through Your Telescope?
Who need stars when you can star at spiders through your telescope instead? Bloody spiders. Read More >>
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?
Who need stars when you can star at spiders through your telescope instead? Bloody spiders. Read More >>
Mother Nature bringing Earth to its knees.
Bats are small, generally harmless to humans, but that doesn’t stop this air-to-leaf pounce from being kind of scary, though.
Ultrasound study offers clues, but hasn't cracked the case.
NASA scientists have captured a remarkable glimpse of a primordial compact galaxy that came into existence at a time when the Universe was exceptionally young, using the Hubble Space Telescope. Read More >>
Has Cameron been a friend to science and technology? Is the Prime Minister respectful of our civil liberties or does he want to spy on us? And does he like to throw the first punch? His ten years as Conservative leader, in review.
It could put an end to doctor's handing out antibiotics too early, before there's any sign of infection.
Humans have dreamt of it for over a century, but the fact of the matter is, we haven’t made it past the crust. An ambitious new scientific expedition hopes to change that.
Some 74 years after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, archaeologists have finally accomplished the task of exploring and photographing the downed PBY-5 Catalina seaplane - one of the attack's first casualties. Read More >>
Drops of bobbing silicon oil do more than create aesthetically satisfying ripples across a slick surface. They could be indirect evidence of an alternate solution to a nagging question in quantum mechanics
It's a breakthrough that could lead to printable organs, as well as greater understanding of human physiology.
Antarctica stands to lose much of its ice, especially in its western half.
The controversial experiment designed to hunt for signs the universe is a hologram has failed to find any of the evidence it was seeking.
It sounds like it could be something that Q hands to Bond, but this is real life.
A great view of the un-illuminated side of Saturn’s majestic rings.
Scientists say the chances of this are quite slim, but warn that such an event would threaten life on Earth.