The UK will make publicly funded studies open to all.
A study has found only 30% of radical loss of the Arctic’s ice is due to natural variability in the Atlantic, and it will probably get worse.
Several times in the past 10 years scientists have had to rewrite the textbooks on Neanderthals, the last species of human to go extinct.
World’s leading thinkers write on what impresses them — from Darwinism to the concept of ‘deep time’
In the latest tell-people-what-they-want-to-hear speech on the election circuit, Newt Gingrich made a remarkable promise: he wants a moon base.
The pseudo-scientific utterances of famous stars are often dangerously misleading or just wrong.
Scientists exploring underwater vents near Antarctica have found a world of creatures thriving in temperatures of 400C°.
Scientists have worked out how caffeine might offer protection against some skin cancers, a finding that could lead to better sunscreens.
Mothers who sleep on their backs or right-hand sides the night before giving birth are twice as likely to have a stillborn child.
Scientists find abnormalities in key areas of grey matter in the frontal lobes.
The planets, found by researchers at Notre Dame University, in the United States, do not orbit any star.
Scientists have found that passive smoking can raise blood pressure levels in boys.
Cut back on tuna and salmon and load your plate instead with herring and sardines if you want to help save the world’s fish.
Scientists at Oxford University have successfully tested a universal flu vaccine that could work against all known strains of the illness.
Scientists say they’ve shown that damage done to nerve cells in multiple sclerosis could be reversed by activating stem cells in the body.
Global carbon dioxide emissions dropped 1.3% in 2009 compared with the previous year, largely owing to the effects of the economic crisis.
The pattern of brain activity in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is markedly different from that of children without the condition.
The brain uses several ways to work out the location of different parts of the body — this includes feedback from muscles and joints.
When Steve Jobs launched his latest must-have computer to the world, he might not have been thinking about the dolphin market.
Potter’s technology makes drilling more simple and cheaper and, consequently, enhanced geothermal systems (EGS) more economically viable.