Women Aren't the Only Ones With a "Biological Clock"—Men Lose Fertility as They Age, Too
Common wisdom says that men retain much of their fertility well into old age. That common wisdom is wrong.
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?
Common wisdom says that men retain much of their fertility well into old age. That common wisdom is wrong.
Grim paper explains how to locate bodies in “clandestine graves” by analysing the gas emissions they give off.
On All Hallow’s Eve, an asteroid dubbed “Spooky” will make its closest approach to our planet.
Fungi don’t just adapt to their environment. The environment adapts to them.
Scientists are powerfully attached to the new process.
The ScanPyramids Project will use cutting-edge techniques to safely image pyramids in Giza and Dahshur.
No one knows how many Omura whales exist so this Madagascan sighting is hugely important.
Money. Cars. Sex. Accomplishment. Things. They all make us happy. But drugs and alcohol and addiction all feed the dopamine meter too.
It's down to a phenomenon called 'perceptual attack time'.
People using tech to monitor their sexual activity is nothing new, but now someone has turned that data into music.
The tuatara doesn’t have a penis, and ironically, that’s made it a linchpin for understanding how penises evolved in vertebrates.
To understand why, though, we must explore the capricious fossil record and the means by which palaeontologists sift through the past.
Who needs a peep hole when a wireless network will do?
Tractor beams are science fiction verging on science fact, but now physicists has discovered new method to levitate and manipulate small objects, using what they call “acoustic holograms”. Read more >>
The so-far inexplicable formation might be caused by a rapidly spinning and irregularly shaped ball of gas.
Hall thrusters power Earth's satellites but it's taken some French flair to ready them for the Red Planet.