Japan Approves Scientist's Plan to Create World's First Humanimals
This research aims to one day provide a source of transplantable human organs from animals we already have the infrastructure to slaughter.
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?
This research aims to one day provide a source of transplantable human organs from animals we already have the infrastructure to slaughter.
The country plans to launch miniature surveillance satellites brimming with defensive weaponry in the next few years.
German chemists may have finally come up with a solution that makes these blemishes almost invisible to the naked eye.
It sounds like a medical breakthrough straight out of science fiction, and for the time being, it kind of is.
In a single tooth, scientists might have discovered an important piece of primate evolutionary history.
“At peak temperatures, pavement can be hot enough to cause second-degree burns in a matter of seconds.”
It took a team of five sculptors some 500 hours to make these buttery pioneers, 400 of which took place in a cooler set to 7 degrees Celsius.
Just what the Arctic needs: more heat.
While this study is worth taking with a few grains of salt, evidence does show a link between nuts and, well, nuts.
This novel type of dressing could rapidly heal all sorts of wounds.
This five-minute craft is, perhaps among the best things on Facebook today. But, like many things on Facebook, it’s not quite right.
They even describe one volcano that might be influenced by the moon’s orbit.
No, you shouldn’t worry about this specific asteroid (anymore, at least), but you might wonder how we missed it.
“The problem with this story all along is in separating speculation from fact.”
Looking back at some of Chandra's coolest and most influential scientific discoveries.
Scientists have discovered a pair of white dwarfs that might one day produce a major gravitational wave discovery, according to a new paper.