Good News

Scientists explain magnetic pole's wanderings. (Jonathan Amos, 6 May 2020)
How our daily travel harms the planet. (Jocelyn Timperley, 18 March 2020)
Amazake, Japan's superdrink. (Laura Studarus, 18 March 2020)
Earth's oldest asteroid impact 'may have ended ice age'. (BBC News, 22 January 2020)
Gardening gives me a lot of peace. (Olive Faure and Keir Creighton, filmed by Aaron Tan, 29 December 2019)
The teenage activists taking after Greta Thunberg. (Ellen Tsang, 22 December 2019)
Why more women are becoming farmers. (Harriet Agerholm, 21 August 2019)
Student teaches rugby to high security prisoners in Peru. (BBC News, 20 August 2019)
'Most unusual' vehicle stopped on M25 in Hertfordshire. (BBC News, 19 August 2019)
Soy's isoflavones have oestrogenic properties. (Jessica Brown, 19 August 2019)
Billions of bottled messages in the ocean?. (BBC News, 18 August 2019)
Is the bystander effect a myth?. (Tobias Chapple, 13 August 2019)
The language of the Pontic Greeks. (Jessica Bateman, 12 August 2019)
The hidden air pollution inside your workplace. (Chris Stokel-Walker, 16 October 2018)
Can you lose your native language?. (Sophie Hardach, 8 June 2018)
Tales from the far-flung Faroes. (Christian Petersen, 2 June 2018)
I wish mum's phone was never invented. (Georgina Rannard, 23 May 2018)
The Gambian village transformed by graffiti. (Clare Spencer, 22 May 2018)
Prison without guards or weapons in Brazil. (Jo Griffin, 22 May 2018)
The innocent kids growing up behind bars. (BBC, 18 May 2018)
Turning carbon dioxide into rock - forever. (Valeria Perasso, 18 May 2018)
These Are Animals. (Lawrence, 17 May 2018)
Plea for peace. (BBC, 17 May 2018)
'Feel good' factor boosts global forest expansion, not CO2. (Matt McGrath, 15 May 2018)
Why the cost of equality is a lot lower than we thought. (Zoe Cormier, 4 May 2018)
Health benefits of dark chocolate: cocoa vs cacao. (Corey Pemberton)
The secret green shelters that feed London's cabbies. (Ella Buchan, 1 May 2018)
Stopping violence like it was a virus. (Ana Lucia Gonzalez and Alice Grenié, 30 April 2018)
Egypt's curly hair comeback. (Dina Aboughazala, 30 April 2018)
Thwaites Glacier: Biggest ever Antarctic field campaign. (Jonathan Amos, 30 April 2018)
Leeuwarden, Ljouwert, Liwwadden, the Dutch city with a constantly changing name. (Mike MacEacheran, 24 April 2018)
Locked up and vulnerable when prison makes things worse. (Melissa Hogenboom, 16 April 2018)
Susan Kigula: The woman who freed herself and hundreds from death row. (Megha Mohan, 13 April 2018)
How ancient DNA is transforming our view of the past. (Paul Rincon, 11 April 2018)
Iron Age study targets British DNA mystery. (Paul Rincon, 11 April 2018)
Ghostly galaxy may be missing dark matter. (Mary Halton, 28 March 2018)
Late diagnosis autism. (Lucy Edwards, Paul Kerley, Phil Coomes, Kathryn Westcott, 26 March 2018)
  Doing my workshop session, I don't feel as awkward as I do talking to people socially.
  It feels really natural to be up there performing, not having to talk to anyone specifically.
  I am talking at people, that's the difference, not constantly thinking,
   "When can I chime in? When is my time to talk? Would it be rude if I said this?"

Two students brought together by gun violence. (Natalia Zuo, Reha Kansara, Ritu Prasad, 25 March 2018)
How video games make some teens millionaires. (Bryan Lufkin, 23 March 2018)
The people who make their own watches. (Chris Baraniuk, 23 March 2018)
The curious customs of Copacabana. (Jenny Adams, 2 March 2018)
Why being a loner may be good for your health. (Christine Ro, 28 February 2018)
The italian village Seborga that wants independence. (Dario Bosio, 27 February 2018)
The mysterious origins of Finland's true name. (Amy McPherson, 26 February 2018)
The hidden side to your personality. (Christian Jarrett, 22 February 2018)
Pope says serpent temptation in Bible 'first fake news'. (BBC, 24 January 2018)
This church has survived a fire that started back in 1962. (Owen Amos, 24 January 2018)
What will millennials kill this year?. (S.J. Velasquez, 18 January 2018)
Why governments are broken and how to fix them. (Rachel Nuwer, 16 January 2018)
Hubble scores unique close-up view of distant galaxy. (Paul Rincon, 16 January 2018)
An episode of Woman's Hour: Why a side gig can be harder for women. (Sarah Keating, 15 January 2018)
How feeling bad changes the brain. (Melissa Hogenboom, 15 January 2018)
Bulgaria, the country that brought yoghurt to the world. (Madhvi Ramani, 11 January 2018)
The mythic landscape of modern India. (Sophia Smith Galer, 10 January 2018)
Irans ancient village of little people. (Shervin Abdolhamidi, 10 January 2018)
Catherine Deneuve warns about a new "puritanism". (BBC, 10 January 2018)
"Tartufi d'Alba". (David Farley, 9 January 2018)
Ancient romes sinful city at the bottom of the sea. (BBC, 7 January 2018)
The mystery of why some people become sudden geniuses. (Zaria Gorvett, 6 January 2018)
Israel dig unearths prehistoric 'paradise'. (Adrienne Bernhard, 5 January 2018)
Is social media bad for you the evidence and the unknowns. (Jessica Brown, 5 January 2018)
Social media's impact on our mental well-being. (Sophia Smith Galer, 05 January 2018)
Kumamoto, the japanese castle that defied history. (Mike MacEacheran, 4 January 2018)
You can start again after dropping out of university - I did. (BBC, 4 January 2018)
The forgotten Swiss diplomat who rescued thousands from Holocaust. (BBC, 4 January 2018)
My father, the Catholic priest who doesn't want to know me. (Sarah McDermott, 3 January 2018)
Is Oshi Palav the king of meals?. (Amanda Ruggeri, 2 January 2018)
Fancy a holiday running a bookshop in Wigtown?. (BBC, 2 January 2018)
Is climate change making hurricanes worse?
There's no clear upward trend in accumulated cyclonic energy score since 1896. (Chris Fawkes, 30 December 2017)
Aux belles poules. (BBC, 30 December 2017)
This cash-strapped school sends kids to Harvard and Stanford. (Alex Dackevych, 29 December 2017)
Obama warns against irresponsible social media use. (BBC News, 27 December 2017)
Staying in this New Year? You're not alone. (BBC News, 27 December 2017)
Why things may be not be as bad as we think. (Nick Higham, 26 December 2017)
Eight amazing science stories of 2017. (BBC News, 25 December 2017)
Restless legs syndrome. (Sally Abrahams, 25 December 2017)
How the food of Charles Dickens defined Christmas. (Emma Jane Kirby, 25 December 2017)
Goodbye Russia: A generation packs its bags. (23 December 2017)
'Remarkable' truffle discovery on Paris rooftop raises hopes of more. (23 December 2017)
France's centenarian barmaid gives her secret to old age. (23 December 2017)
How did a christmas carol come to be. (Lucinda Hawksley, 22 December 2017)
The glitch that stole Christmas. (Alan Woodward, 22 December 2017)
Auschwitz survivor Eva Schloss recorded in virtual reality. (22 December 2017)
The legitimate concerns of snowflake workers. (Cary Cooper, 21 December 2017)
Educated people are implicitly biased against the less educated.
("One should learn to further their knowledge, rather than learn to do well on tests."
. (Melissa Hogenboom, 20 December 2017)
The Dutch city that's more like Dubai. (Bert Archer, 20 December 2017)
Ten books to read in 2018. (Jane Ciabattari, 19 December 2017)
Modern women in the land of Genghis Khan. (Feranak Amidi, Gulnara Kasmambetova, Alice Grenié, Johannes Dell, 19 December 2017)
Switzerland funicular: World's steepest railway opens. (17 December 2017)
The wild era that changed what we wear. (Lindsay Baker, 15 December 2017)
The secret note that led to my birth parents. (Changfu Chang, 8 December 2017)
Did Ed Sheeran commit 'poverty tourism' in charity film?. (7 December 2017)
Philoxenia. (Lindsey Galloway, 5 December 2017)
Why some people can hear this silent gif. (Rozina Sini, 5 December 2017)
The compelling case for working a lot less. (Amanda Ruggeri, 5 December 2017)
Why women fear a backlash over #MeToo. (Katty Kay, 1 December 2017)
The six tribes that could shape Europe's future. (Matthew Goodwin, Thomas Raines and David Cutts, 1 December 2017)
The Iranian Revolution: Chilling snapshots of a lynch mob. (Fiona Macdonald, 30 November 2017)
Why you sometimes have to quit to win. (Amanda Ruggeri, 28 November 2017)
What would happen if all animals were as smart as us?. (Rachel Nuwer, 25 November 2017)
India's abandoned 'holiday wives'. (Deepthi Bathini, 23 November 2017)
Deep fat fryers may help form cooling clouds. (Matt McGrath, 23 November 2017)
Twenty six words we dont want to lose. (Fiona Macdonald, 22 November 2017)
The actress in a legal row to prove she's unmarried. (Henna Saeed, 22 November 2017)
The German diamond-clad town of Nördlingen. (Matthew Vickery, 22 November 2017)
Meet Canada's 'weed sommelier'. (Mark Leslie, 21 November 2017)
The secret tricks hidden inside restaurant menus. (Richard Gray, 20 November 2017)
How worried should we be about melting ice caps?. (Sophie Wedgwood, 18 November 2017)
London calling. (18 November 2017)
Dog owners have lower mortality, study finds. (Katie Silver, 17 November 2017)
Returning to Kashmir, where our parents were shot in front of us. (Andrew Whitehead, 16 November 2017)
Australia same-sex marriage: Senators rise to applaud speech. (16 November 2017)
Paltering. (Melissa Hogenboom, 15 November 2017)
Climate's magic rabbit: Pulling CO2 out of thin air. (Matt McGrath, 15 November 2017)
I escaped IS to avoid killing my friends. (Joelle Naayem, Eloise Dicker, Dina Demrdash, Jonathan Blezard, 15 November 2017)
Sir Mohamed Farah receives knighthood. (14 November 2017)
The Arab poet who worshipped wine. (Sophia Smith Galer, 14 November 2017)
Growing up in 60 centigrades below zero. (Brice Portolano photographs, 14 November 2017)
How Hiroshima rose from the ashes. (Steve John Powell, 13 November 2017)
Why Chinese mothers won't go out after giving birth. (Amber Haque, 13 November 2017)
San Francisco shipwreck (1609): Divers find 'cannonball clue'. (Helier Cheung, 13 November 2017)
Singles Day in China. (Cindy Sui, 11 November 2017)
Turning Kenya's plastic bottle waste into boats. (11 November 2017)
A ceiling not of glass but of ice, for women in science. (10 November 2017)
Five quirky solutions to open office woes. (Bryan Borzykowski, 9 November 2017)
Portuguese trawler nets 'prehistoric shark'. (Martin Morgan, 9 November 2017)
The woman who stood in for Aphrodite. (Natalie Haynes, 9 November 2017)
The woman who can't forget. (Sarah Keating, 8 November 2017)
The inventor who can't stop helping people. (7 November 2017)
The hospital helping heal the Middle East. (7 November 2017)
Fossil of 'our earliest ancestors' found in Dorset. (Helen Briggs, 7 November 2017)
Giant sharks attack crew submarine. (6 November 2017)
North Korean snacks. (Reuters, 6 November 2017)
A piece of cake. (3 November 2017)
The father-daughter pilot team. (3 November 2017)
My life as a hostage of al-Qaeda. (Claire Bates, 1 November 2017)
What causes extreme sleepiness. (Henry Nicholls, 1 November 2017)
Sally Potter describes how to film an 'unfilmable' book. (1 November 2017)
What a Facebook experiment did to news in Cambodia. (Ben Paviour, 31 October 2017)
Happiness returned in Syria's Raqqa. (29 October 2017)
10 things to know about sleep as the clocks go back. (Rachel Schraer & Joey D'Urso, 28 October 2017)
Astronomers race to study a mystery object from outside our solar system. (Nicholas St. Fleur, 27 October 2017)
What if the VW Beetle had never existed. (Richard Gray, 26 October 2017)
Ten TV shows to watch in November. (Eddie Mullan, 26 October 2017)
Couple kept apart by strict father marry 40 years later. (26 October 2017)
WWI poem spelt out in poppies. (John McCrae, remembered 26 October 2017)
Nives Meroi and Romano Benet: A life in the death zone. (Sarah McDermott, 25 October 2017)
Spartan women were known for their independence. (Stav Dimitropoulos, 25 October 2017)
The Jewish forgers who outwitted the Nazis. (25 October 2017)
To be rushed off your feet is to be busy, important, valued. (Robert Colvile, 24 October 2017)
What friends can do for you!. (Megha Mohan, 24 October 2017)
How much people love their king:
"We will do the best we can even though His Majesty won't be there to see."
(Daniel Bull and Thanyarat Doksone, 24 October 2017)
While the information published in books and periodicals may change with the tide, the people, who see, hear and pass on what they remember, act as their own historians. (Lina Zeldovich, 23 October 2017)
Feeling isolated as an asexual in a sexualised society. (23 October 2017)
Chibok diaries: Chronicling a Boko Haram kidnapping. (23 October 2017)
How Wim Wenders put the snap back into Polaroids. (22 October 2017)
The woman who taught us about chimps. (19 October 2017)
Russian dance "Berezka". (20 October 2017)
Still photographs spring to life. (19 October 2017)
The great thaw of americas north. (Sara Goudarzi, 16 October 2017)
How a girl who cannot speak got a unique voice. (16 October 2017)
The president who lived in a cave. (Carrie Gracie, Ben Milne and Finlo Rohrer, 13 October 2017)
The ancient condiment that came back from the dead. (12 October 2017)
See also Garum.
Why did Vikings have 'Allah' embroidered into funeral clothes?. (12 October 2017)
The incredible material under our noses. (10 October 2017)
When artificial intelligence met peaches. (4 October 2017)
Einstein's waves win Nobel Prize in physics. (3 October 2017)
Highway to Heaven. (28 September 2017)
GW170814. (27 September 2017)
See also: Gravitational-waves observed by Virgo and LIGO.
The women who fed the UK in World War II. (20 September 2017)
How Americanisms are killing the English language. (Hephzibah Anderson, 6 September 2017)
The tricks to make yourself effortlessly charming. (Tiffanie Wen, 28 June 2017)
How western civilisation could collapse. (Rachel Nuwer, 18 April 2017)
We have found 'Earth-like' planets. (20 February 2017)
Why some people are always running late. (Laura Clarke, 10 February 2017)
Growing up a prisoner in a cult. (Vanessa Engle, Ben Milne, Johann Perry, Rob Brown, Alison Gee, Phil Coomes, 26 January 2017)
Native English speakers are the worlds worst communicators. (Lennox Morrison, 31 October 2016)
The most powerful explosion in documented history. (Melissa Hogenboom, 7 July 2016)
LIGO makes the first direct detection of Gravitational Waves. (11 February 2016)
Files to 'print your own' Rosetta comet. (3 October 2014)
Satellites detect 'thousands' of new ocean-bottom mountains. (2 October 2014)
Cosmic inflation: BICEP 'underestimated' dust problem. (22 September 2014)
'Artificial retina' could detect sub-atomic particles. (21 September 2014)
Very accurate trigonometric calculus from before Pythagoras. (By Jack Phillips, 20 September, 2017)
The ocean is a strange place after dark. (Michelle Douglass, 18 August 2017)
UK's deep sea mountain life filmed. (4 August 2014)
Euskara. (Anna Bitong, 24 July 2017)
'Underground oceans' potentially have 3 times more water than surface. (13 June 2014)
Ancient Egyptians transported pyramid stones over wet sand. (30 April 2014)
Mystery of 'ocean quack sound' solved. (23 April 2014)
Sheryl Sandberg on helping small businesses. (22 April 2014)
NASA's Kepler discovers first Earth-size planet in the 'Habitable Zone' of another star. (17 April 2014)
See also: The discovery of an Earth-sized planet.
Artists 'have structurally different brains' . (17 April 2014)
Living materials could grow products. (26 March 2014)
See also (from 2008): Paul Stamets: 6 ways mushrooms can save the world.
and, moreover, (from 2010): Eben Bayer: Are mushrooms the new plastic?.
furthermore (from 2010): Mushroom Packaging.
and, moreover, (from 2013): Paul Stamets - The Future is Fungi.
Cosmic inflation: 'Spectacular' discovery hailed. (17 March 2014)
His disclosure of US surveillance activities was an "enormous service" to human rights and European citizens. (1 October 2013)
Sweden ranked first for treatment of elderly in UN report. (1 October 2013)
Mystery 13th Century eruption traced to Lombok, Indonesia. (30 September 2013)
Scientists create never-before-seen form of matter.
Article: Attractive photons in a quantum nonlinear medium. (25 September 2013)
Subaquatic pyramidal shaped structure found - Azores. (19 September 2013)
New insights into creating ball lightning in the lab. (19 August 2013)
NASA Voyager statement about competing models to explain recent spacecraft data. (15 August 2013)
Smoking bans are more harmful than helpful. (8 August 2013)
Why is cycling so popular in the Netherlands?. (7 August 2013)
Selfish traits not favoured by evolution. (2 August 2013)
Watch Freeing energy from the grid. (October 2012)
Super-camera shows how light moves. (1 August 2013)
You can also watch MIT camera captures light at a trillion frames per second.
Wolf howl identification technology excites experts. (22 July 2013)
Neutrino 'flavour' flip confirmed. (19 July 2013)
Fanatics fear education, Malala says. (12 July 2013)
A secure messenger with a beautiful design. (9 July 2013)
Plants 'seen doing quantum physics'. (21 June 2013)
Science spend 'vital for economy'. (5 June 2013)
Light-beam 'twins' take data farther. (27 May 2013)
Bright Explosion on the Moon. (16 May 2013
A new fundamental particle, the E(38)
Not at CERN or at Fermilab, but by a reanalysis of already existing experimental results.
Published at the ArXiv.
Now confirmed at JINR (Dubna) in "Observation of the E(38)-boson".
See also Comment and Reply.
Peter Higgs awarded Companion of Honour in New Year honours list. (29 December 2012)
Graphene research gets £21.5m investment fund. (27 December 2012)
Tau Ceti's planets nearest around single, Sun-like star. (19 December 2012)
Ebb and Flow slam into Moon. (18 December 2012)
Maori stones hold magnetic clues. (7 December 2012)
Black Marble, a night-time view of Earth. (6 December 2012)
Exoplanet around Alpha Centauri is nearest-ever. (17 October 2012)
Physics Nobel goes to Serge Haroche and David Wineland. (9 October 2012)
Nobel Prize winner, was 'too stupid' for science at school. (8 October 2012)
Physicists have found "non-standard" particle. (29 September 2012)
Ig Nobel Prizes. (19 September 2012)
Neanderthals used feathers as 'personal ornaments'. (17 September 2012)
Before we actually know what the observed signal is, CERN, the LHC, and the CMS and ATLAS teams must perform additional tests. (10 September 2012)
Studies find Earth has enough wind to power the world. (10 September 2012)
Science helps Spain's natural cork industry pop back. (10 September 2012)
Nikola Tesla: The patron saint of geeks?. (10 September 2012)
More planets could harbour life. (10 September 2012)
Arctic ice melting at 'amazing' speed, scientists find. (7 September 2012)
Israeli archeologists find rare stone age figures. (30 August 2012)
Gravity waves spotted from white-dwarf pair. (29 August 2012)
Galaxy cluster's 'starburst' surprises astronomers. (15 August 2012)
Nasa's Curiosity rover pictured on Mars by MRO satellite. (7 August 2012)
Is this the biggest fresh-water fish caught in UK?. (30 July 2012)
Saturn moon Iapetus' huge landslides stir intrigue. (29 July 2012)
Vast aquifer found in Namibia could last for centuries. (20 July 2012)
First spiral galaxy in early Universe stuns astronomers. (19 July 2012)
International Mathematical Olympiad. (July 2012)
Graphene transistors in high-performance demonstration. (July 18, 2012)
Light trick to see around corners. (July 15, 2012)
The poetry of subatomic particles. (July 5, 2012)
'Twisted light' carries 2.5 terabits of data per second. (June 25, 2012)
NeverSeconds blogger Martha Payne school dinner photo ban lifted. (June 15, 2012)
Particles point way for Nasa's Voyager. (June 15, 2012)
Space 'textures' nearly ruled out in WMap study. (June 13, 2012)
Linus Torvalds: Linux succeed thanks to selfishness and trust. (June 13, 2012)
Transit of Venus: What is it and who can see it?. (June 6, 2012)
Briosa vence taça de portugal 2012. (May 20, 2012)
100-Year Starship: Mae Jemison reaches for the stars. (May 18, 2012)
Giants of French history: Jules Ferry and Marie Curie. (May 15, 2012)
The count-up to 2052. (May 7, 2012)
Annette en Máxima samen in zeepkist De Witte Bruid. (April 30, 2012)
Black-Scholes: The maths formula linked to the financial crash. (April 27, 2012)
Mining asteroids for water, gold and platinum. (April 24, 2012)
Maori Troilus and Cressida puts haka into Shakespeare. (April 21, 2012)
Serious Blow to Dark Matter Theories?. (April 18, 2012)
Getting to grips with dark matter: simulating the entire universe!. (April 16, 2012)
West Kirby student named UK's top young scientist. (March 17, 2012)
Neutrinos clocked at light-speed in new Icarus test.
Just like Einstein correctly assumed for massless particles!
So, what about the neutrino mass?
. (March 16, 2012)
Quest for quirky quantum particles may have struck gold.. (February 28, 2012)
Was Einstein wrong - or was a cable loose at CERN?. (February 23, 2012)
Supermassive black hole will 'eat' gas cloud (December 14, 2011)
Kepler 22-b: Earth-like planet confirmed (December 5, 2011)
Stars concoct complex molecules (October 28, 2011)
Faster-than-light neutrino experiment to be run again (October 28, 2011)
Girls equal in British throne succession (October 28, 2011)
Old American theory is 'speared' (October 21, 2011)
IQ 'can change in teenage years' (October 19, 2011)
As it happened: Mid-East prisoner exchange (October 18, 2011)
Nanotube yarns twist like muscles (October 14, 2011)
Tacita Dean transforms Tate Modern into cinema (October 10, 2011)
Brain 'rejects negative thoughts' (October 9, 2011)
Pavlopetri: A window on to Bronze Age suburban life (October 8, 2011)
Severe hypoglycaemia cause found (October 7, 2011)
Venus springs ozone layer surprise (October 7, 2011)
Nobel peace prize 2011 has been awarded jointly to three women (October 7, 2011)
Nobel physics prize honours accelerating Universe find (October 4, 2011)
Female flies' immune genes turned on by males' song (October 3, 2011)
UK invests in graphene technology (October 3, 2011)
Very sad news: Tevatron atom smasher shuts after more than 25 years (September 30, 2011)
                          Fermilab pulls the plug on Tevatron (October 1, 2011)
What does Tevatron closure mean for big US science? (September 30, 2011)
Saudi woman driver's lashing 'overturned by king' (September 28, 2011)
'Lost' Beethoven work to be aired (September 28, 2011)
Mayan documentary will show evidence of alien contact, says Mexico (September 26, 2011)
Women in Saudi Arabia to vote and run in elections (September 25, 2011)
Plant hunters' legacy help Japan's threatened species (September 24, 2011)
Speed-of-light results under scrutiny at Cern (September 23, 2011)
Jason Palmer: "One of the pillars of modern science will come tumbling down!"
Scientists claim to break speed of light (September 22, 2011)
Indonesian women stage skirt protest over rape remarks (September 18, 2011)
Dwarf galaxies suggest dark matter theory may be wrong (September 16, 2011)
Nasa's Kepler telescope finds planet orbiting two suns (September 16, 2011)
Big fossil croc may have competed with giant snake (September 15, 2011)
Dinosaur feather evolution trapped in Canadian amber (September 15, 2011)
African fossils put new spin on human origins story (September 8, 2011)
Meteorites delivered gold to Earth (September 8, 2011)
Dark matter hinted at again at Cresst experiment (September 7, 2011)
Electric motor made from a single molecule (September 5, 2011)
Higgs particle could be found by Christmas (September 1, 2011)
LHC results put supersymmetry theory 'on the spot' (August 27, 2011)
Cloud simulator tests climate models (August 24, 2011)
Higgs boson range narrows at European collider (August 22, 2011)
Deep-space camera passes cosmic eye test (August 18, 2011)
Donors help re-open mothballed telescopes searching for ET (August 16, 2011)
Hydrogen made by enzyme is faster and cheaper (August 11, 2011)
Arctic 'tipping point' may not be reached (August 4, 2011)
Oxygen finally spotted in space (August 2, 2011)
Higgs boson 'hints' also seen by US lab (July 24, 2011)
Asymmetric quarks defy standard model of physics (July 23, 2011)
Astronomy without a telescope - Bubblology (July 23, 2011)
Elliptical galaxies much younger than previously thought? (July 22, 2011)
Caltech-led astronomers discover the largest and most distant reservoir of water yet (July 22, 2011)
Large Hadron Collider results excite (some) scientists (July 22, 2011)
Antimatter Tevatron mystery gains ground (July 10, 2011)
Panel probes new particle results (June 16, 2011)
Neutrino particle 'flips to all flavours' (June 15, 2011)
Tests 'reject new particle claim' (June 10, 2011)
Joshua Kaufman's Mac recovered with 'Hidden' app clues (June 2, 2011)
Ancient cave women 'left childhood homes' (June 1, 2011)
Electron particle's shape revealed (May 25, 2011)
Cosmic distance record 'broken' (May 25, 2011)
New method 'confirms dark energy' (May 19, 2011)
'Diamond exoplanet' idea boosted by telescope find (December 8, 2010)
Arsenic-loving bacteria may help in hunt for alien life (December 2, 2010)
'Trillions' of Earths orbit red stars in older galaxies (December 1, 2010)
Ball lightning 'may explain UFOs' (December 1, 2010)
Cosmos may show echoes of events before Big Bang (November 27, 2010)
Early retirement 'is good for us', research shows (November 24, 2010)
Dark energy and flat Universe exposed by simple method (November 24, 2010)
Massive neutron star shakes up theory
"Some scientists had suggested exotic particles
such as hyperons, kaon condensates or free quarks
could exist deep inside neutron stars.
But this observation preclude this possibility."
(October 28, 2010)
Astronomers find evidence for unusual class of black holes (September 9, 2010)
Famous female scientists are unknown to UK public (August 26, 2010)
Oetzi the Iceman may have been buried (August 25, 2010)
Dark matter hunt eyes deeper home (July 25, 2010)
LHC closes in on top (July 23, 2010)
Stars reveal carbon 'spaceballs' (July 22, 2010)
Earth younger than previously thought (July 12, 2010)
Rosetta probe passes Asteroid Lutetia (July 10, 2010)
US experiment hints at 'multiple God particles' (June 14, 2010)
What is Consuming Hydrogen and Acetylene on Titan? (June 3, 2010)
Bolivia backs circus animal ban (April 17, 2010)
Lovelock: 'We can't save the planet' (March 30, 2010)
Planck spies massive dust clouds (March 18, 2010)
A rare glimpse of the cave of crystals (January 19, 2010)
'Green Nobel' for forest champion (April 19, 2009)
What do you get if you divide science by God? (March 24, 2009)
'Silver sensation' seeks cold cosmos (February 9, 2009)
There is a giant black hole at the centre of our galaxy. (December 9, 2008)
The brilliance of creative chaos (December 5, 2008)
Solar taxi goes round the world (December 5, 2008)
LHC needs warning system (December 5, 2008)
Ancient supernova mystery solved (December 4, 2008)
Bad bosses damage your heart!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! (November 26, 2008)
Creating a memory device out of paper (November 26, 2008)
Physicists spot unusual charged meson (November 16, 2007)
See article (August 2007) arXiv:0708.1790v2 [hep-ex]
Firms 'need clear climate policies' (October 8, 2007)
Rare dead star (Calvera) found near Earth (August 20, 2007)
Global Warning (May 18, 2007)
Why are Dutch children so happy? (February 14, 2007)
The hug that lasted more than five thousand years (February 8, 2007)
Stonehenge builders' houses found (January 30, 2007)
Lightning balls created in the lab (January 10, 2007)
Parrot's oratory stuns scientists (January 4, 2007)
Sitting straight 'bad for backs' (November 28, 2006)
Communities 'key' to Danish housing (November 22, 2006)
Português Gustavo Castelo Branco arrisca Nobel (May 11, 2006)
Swift telescope looks to go to the edge (April 11, 2006)
Virus used to make nanoparticles (March 20, 2006)
Take part in the world's largest climate experiment ever (February 17, 2006)
Marine life treasure trove found (February 14, 2006)
Space rock re-opens Mars debate (February 8, 2006)
Oldest Tyrannosaurus rex relative unveiled (February 8, 2006)
New animal and plant species found in Papua 'Eden' (February 7, 2006)
See also: Birds of Paradise and similar
Dark matter comes out of the cold (February 6, 2006)
See also: Seismic search for strange quark nugget passage (May, 2002)
Light bulbs: Not such a bright idea (February 4, 2006)
Ban The Bulb (November 7, 2005)
Planet Under Pressure (October 1, 2005)
The world on a train (August 9, 2005)
How I'd change the world... (February 11, 2005)
Distinguido trabalho sobre sistema nervoso (December 30, 2004)
Distinguido trabalho sobre sistema nervoso (December 30, 2004)
Prémio Internacional para Trabalho de Investigadores da UC, UTMAD, UBI e UL (December 16, 2004)
Winners of Brain Research Young Investigator Awards 2004 (November 30, 2004)
The hunt for cosmic blasts' secret (October 25, 2004)
Brothers reunited by fate after 53 years (Octoberber 19, 2004)
Particle lab CERN celebrates 50 years (September 29, 2004)
Portugal pode perder a face no maior Laboratório de Física de Partículas (September 28, 2004)
Participação no novo acelerador está em risco (September 28, 2004)
Ministério diz que vai pagar dentro de dias (September 28, 2004): Não se esqueça, por favor!
2004 - An Active Hurricane Season (September 28, 2004)
Wish you were atmosp-here (September 28, 2004)
In pictures: Milan fashion week (September 27, 2004)
UK launches 10 million pound recycling effort (September 27, 2004)
Italian 'grandad' finds a family (September 24, 2004)
Chewing over Gum Tax to curb Litter (September 23, 2004)
Hubble's deepest shot is a puzzle (September 23, 2004)
Spotlight on Turkish women's rights (September 23, 2004)
Smallest 'guitar string' to weigh atoms (September 22, 2004)
Flying cars swoop to the rescue (September 22, 2004)
A green tank: Can hydrogen really replace petrol in our cars? (September 21, 2004)
Particle collider edges forward (August 20, 2004)
Creator of the web turns knight (July 16, 2004)
Neutrinos 'topple matter theory' (July 13, 2004)
Hubble discovers 100 new planets (July 2, 2004)
Skull fuels Homo erectus debate (July 2, 2004)
Greek joy over semi-final victory (July 1, 2004)
Cassini sends close-ups of rings (July 1, 2004)
Phoebe is 'cosmic time capsule' (June 24, 2004)
Teleportation breakthrough made (June 16, 2004)
Veteran got lift with French President Jacques Chirac (June 8, 2004)
Teenagers reach out via weblogs (June 6, 2004)
Satellite images 'show Atlantis' (June 6, 2004)
Fossils hint at early complexity (June 4, 2004)
Portuguese air force on alert over UFO sighting (June 4, 2004)
Mistério - Objecto que traçou céus de Portugal continua por identificar,
Força Aérea está em estado de alerta com radares e caças F-16. (June 4, 2004)
Reflexo de um satélite (June 2, 2004)
Uma estranha luz na escuridão (June 2, 2004)
ESA desconhece fenómeno nos céus de Portugal (June 2, 2004)
D-Day: How did it change your world? (June 2, 2004)
Origami next frontier in robotics (May 24, 2004)
Lynx birth gives endangered species hope (May 24, 2004)
Potter star mobbed at US premiere (May 24, 2004)
How Ellen DeGeneres came out on top (May 24, 2004)
Check out the invisibility cloak (May 17, 2004)
How a mathematical formula could help you stay awake (May 17, 2004)
Chanting is a hit with city slickers (May 17, 2004)
Physicists probe ancient pyramid (May 13, 2004)
Newlyweds advised to lower hopes (May 13, 2004)
   see also:
Positive Expectations in the Early Years of Marriage:
Should Couples Expect the Best or Brace for the Worst?

'Junk' throws up precious secret (May 12, 2004)
Sex hailed as health boost (May 7, 2004)
Gene is linked to heart attacks (May 5, 2004)
Teeth that regrow (May 3, 2004)
The man who doesn't exist (April 30, 2004)
German takes woman to court for laughing too loud (April 27, 2004)
Lure of the rings (April 24, 2004)
The Celts - BBC Series Ep 1, In the Beginning. (Caryl Ebenezer and J. Mervyn Williams, presented by John Morgan, 2001)
The Celts - BBC Series Ep 2, Heroes in Defeat. (Caryl Ebenezer and J. Mervyn Williams, presented by John Morgan, 2001)
The Celts - BBC Series Ep 3, Sacred Groves. (Caryl Ebenezer and J. Mervyn Williams, presented by John Morgan, 2001)
The Celts - BBC Series Ep 4, From Camelot to Christ. (Caryl Ebenezer and J. Mervyn Williams, presented by John Morgan, 2001)
The Celts - BBC Series Ep 5, Legend and Reality. (Caryl Ebenezer and J. Mervyn Williams, presented by John Morgan, 2001)
The Celts - BBC Series Ep 6, A Dead Song?. (Caryl Ebenezer and J. Mervyn Williams, presented by John Morgan, 2001)