New Scientist is a weekly non-peer-reviewed English-language international science magazine, which since 1996 has also run a website, covering recent developments in science and technology for a general audience. Founded in 1956, it is published by Reed Business Information Ltd, a subsidiary of Reed Elsevier. The company Albert E. Reed acquired New Scientist when it merged with IPC Magazines in 1970, retaining the magazine when it sold most of its consumer magazines in a management buyout to what is now IPC Media.
The magazine covers current developments, news, and commentary from the scientific community, including environmental issues such as climate change. It also prints speculative articles, ranging from the technical to the philosophical. There is a readers' letters section which discusses recent articles, and discussion on the website.
Full story: http://bit.ly/1ftE5xp
A thinner body isn't the only way to fit through a tight gap. A new shape has helped a cockroach robot to perfect its manoeuvres
2:23
Why aliens probably exist
Why aliens probably exist
Why aliens probably exist
Full story: http://bit.ly/1scCG3H
First, try not to think about what alien life might be like. Then wonder whether we have any chance of finding it
2:41
How you can change the past
How you can change the past
How you can change the past
Full story: http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21728971.600 Forget particles and waves. When it comes to the true guise of material reality, what's out th...
3:27
How bitcoin works
How bitcoin works
How bitcoin works
Full story: http://bit.ly/1BxzuA0
Find out what’s behind the volatile new world of virtual money.
2:55
Reality's hidden layers
Reality's hidden layers
Reality's hidden layers
Read more: http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21929282.100 Reality, relativity, causality or free will? Take quantum theory at face value and at least one...
0:49
Ancient planets are almost as old as the universe
Ancient planets are almost as old as the universe
Ancient planets are almost as old as the universe
The oldest rocky planets yet are 11.2 billion years old, just a little younger than the universe - meaning the galaxy started building small worlds early
2:36
What Earth would be like if humans never existed
What Earth would be like if humans never existed
What Earth would be like if humans never existed
What was the planet like before Homo sapiens, and would it still be that way if we had never gone global? We rewind time, erase our ancestors, and hit play R...
2:12
Humanoid robot has a sense of self
Humanoid robot has a sense of self
Humanoid robot has a sense of self
Full story: http://bit.ly/1MNJZCS
The human self has five components. Machines now have three of them. How far away is artificial consciousness – and what does it tell us about ourselves?
1:21
Super-strong robot pulls heavy loads
Super-strong robot pulls heavy loads
Super-strong robot pulls heavy loads
Full story: http://bit.ly/1DHNohp
Two robots borrow techniques from both inchworms and geckos to climb up walls while carrying huge loads
2:31
Reality revealed: The ultimate fabric of the universe
Reality revealed: The ultimate fabric of the universe
Reality revealed: The ultimate fabric of the universe
Full story here: http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21528840.500
Even trying to define what we mean by "reality" is fraught with difficulty
2:43
Why eye contact can help you bond with dogs
Why eye contact can help you bond with dogs
Why eye contact can help you bond with dogs
Full story: http://bit.ly/1ywcyDw
Exchanging gazes with dogs boosts levels of a bonding hormone in both them and us, suggesting they evolved to hijack a uniquely human way of bonding
1:20
Sea ghost breaks record for deepest living fish
Sea ghost breaks record for deepest living fish
Sea ghost breaks record for deepest living fish
Full story: http://bit.ly/1r3msch
A newly-discovered species with a bizarre body has been spotted deeper down than any other living fish
2:25
Why we live in 3D
Why we live in 3D
Why we live in 3D
The explanation of one of reality's greatest mysteries could lie in physics we already know
Read more: http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21929360.700
2:14
Big Bang breakthrough explained with towel and apple
Big Bang breakthrough explained with towel and apple
Big Bang breakthrough explained with towel and apple
Full story: http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn25254 Need a giant IQ to understand the announcement about gravitational waves? Nonsense. Our video explain...
"Superimposing the models revealed perfect matches between the forehead, eyes and nose."
"The fish flicks round to the corresponding side in response to the signal, as if it has caught a whiff of an interesting smell - the stronger the signal, the more sharply it turns."
"These researchers hope such implants will improve our understanding of how the animals interact with their environment, as well as boosting research into tackling human paralysis."
Full story: http://bit.ly/1ftE5xp
A thinner body isn't the only way to fit through a tight gap. A new shape has helped a cockroach robot to perfect its manoeuvres
2:23
Why aliens probably exist
Why aliens probably exist
Why aliens probably exist
Full story: http://bit.ly/1scCG3H
First, try not to think about what alien life might be like. Then wonder whether we have any chance of finding it
2:41
How you can change the past
How you can change the past
How you can change the past
Full story: http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21728971.600 Forget particles and waves. When it comes to the true guise of material reality, what's out th...
3:27
How bitcoin works
How bitcoin works
How bitcoin works
Full story: http://bit.ly/1BxzuA0
Find out what’s behind the volatile new world of virtual money.
2:55
Reality's hidden layers
Reality's hidden layers
Reality's hidden layers
Read more: http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21929282.100 Reality, relativity, causality or free will? Take quantum theory at face value and at least one...
0:49
Ancient planets are almost as old as the universe
Ancient planets are almost as old as the universe
Ancient planets are almost as old as the universe
The oldest rocky planets yet are 11.2 billion years old, just a little younger than the universe - meaning the galaxy started building small worlds early
2:36
What Earth would be like if humans never existed
What Earth would be like if humans never existed
What Earth would be like if humans never existed
What was the planet like before Homo sapiens, and would it still be that way if we had never gone global? We rewind time, erase our ancestors, and hit play R...
2:12
Humanoid robot has a sense of self
Humanoid robot has a sense of self
Humanoid robot has a sense of self
Full story: http://bit.ly/1MNJZCS
The human self has five components. Machines now have three of them. How far away is artificial consciousness – and what does it tell us about ourselves?
1:21
Super-strong robot pulls heavy loads
Super-strong robot pulls heavy loads
Super-strong robot pulls heavy loads
Full story: http://bit.ly/1DHNohp
Two robots borrow techniques from both inchworms and geckos to climb up walls while carrying huge loads
2:31
Reality revealed: The ultimate fabric of the universe
Reality revealed: The ultimate fabric of the universe
Reality revealed: The ultimate fabric of the universe
Full story here: http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21528840.500
Even trying to define what we mean by "reality" is fraught with difficulty
2:43
Why eye contact can help you bond with dogs
Why eye contact can help you bond with dogs
Why eye contact can help you bond with dogs
Full story: http://bit.ly/1ywcyDw
Exchanging gazes with dogs boosts levels of a bonding hormone in both them and us, suggesting they evolved to hijack a uniquely human way of bonding
1:20
Sea ghost breaks record for deepest living fish
Sea ghost breaks record for deepest living fish
Sea ghost breaks record for deepest living fish
Full story: http://bit.ly/1r3msch
A newly-discovered species with a bizarre body has been spotted deeper down than any other living fish
2:25
Why we live in 3D
Why we live in 3D
Why we live in 3D
The explanation of one of reality's greatest mysteries could lie in physics we already know
Read more: http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21929360.700
2:14
Big Bang breakthrough explained with towel and apple
Big Bang breakthrough explained with towel and apple
Big Bang breakthrough explained with towel and apple
Full story: http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn25254 Need a giant IQ to understand the announcement about gravitational waves? Nonsense. Our video explain...
0:59
Space geckos play in zero gravity
Space geckos play in zero gravity
Space geckos play in zero gravity
Full story: http://bit.ly/1CU6cdX
Reptiles rarely play on land, but now a group of "geckonauts" has been caught on camera playing with a floating collar
2:02
Self-fuelled liquid metal motor
Self-fuelled liquid metal motor
Self-fuelled liquid metal motor
Full story: http://bit.ly/1Mq367P
A metal alloy that powers its own movement and deforms to get through tight spots could let us to build a Terminator 2 style robot (minus homicidal tendencies)
0:38
New monkey species spotted in Tibet
New monkey species spotted in Tibet
New monkey species spotted in Tibet
Full story: http://bit.ly/1FHCLz0
Camera traps set up in the remote highlands of Tibet have captured a new species of macaque – one with hairier neck and scrotum and a rounded penis
0:24
Rat biolimb grown in the lab
Rat biolimb grown in the lab
Rat biolimb grown in the lab
Full story: http://bit.ly/1eQWLqn
The growth of a rat forelimb grown in the lab offers hope that one day amputees may receive fully functional, biological replacement limbs
1:08
How temperature can be less than nothing
How temperature can be less than nothing
How temperature can be less than nothing
Full story: http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg22429960.800
There's a whole mirror world of negative temperatures reaching from minus infinity to absolute zero – now we're plumbing those depths for real
97:42
Atheist Experience #596: An essay in "New Scientist"
Atheist Experience #596: An essay in "New Scientist"
Atheist Experience #596: An essay in "New Scientist"
The Atheist Experience #596 for March 15, 2009, with Russell Glasser and Jeff Dee. An essay in "New Scientist". Jeff reads an essay about psueudoscience.
We welcome your comments on the open blog thread for this show.
► http://freethoughtblogs.com/axp/
YouTube comments are at present disabled in our channel, to the displeasure of some. However, each video has a prominent link to the associated open thread that appears on our blog. In the past we've tried opening up the channel to comments, but we found that a very high number of episodes wound up being flooded with a combination of spam, long winded apologists, and various obscene or misog
1:46
How probability can help you control your destiny
How probability can help you control your destiny
How probability can help you control your destiny
Full story: http://bit.ly/1KWXS5Y
A dramatic tale of plane crashes and poisonous berries – and you get to choose the ending. If you didn't think you need to understand probability before, you will now
Option 1: Stick with first choice https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LhanfdtCUEo
Option 2: Switch to other option https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BNKAW9mhkiE
0:54
Wild chimps take care before crossing the road
Wild chimps take care before crossing the road
Wild chimps take care before crossing the road
Full story: http://bit.ly/1ImjAeo
A busy highway in Uganda is a potential death trap, but chimps have learned to look before running across, and they even wait for those less able to cross
1:15
Soccer-playing robots train for championships
Soccer-playing robots train for championships
Soccer-playing robots train for championships
Full story: http://bit.ly/145Sv0l
Watch a team of soccer-playing robots show off their passing skills as they get ready to compete
Full story: http://bit.ly/1ftE5xp
A thinner body isn't the only way to fit through a tight gap. A new shape has helped a cockroach robot to perfect its manoeuvres
Full story: http://bit.ly/1ftE5xp
A thinner body isn't the only way to fit through a tight gap. A new shape has helped a cockroach robot to perfect its manoeuvres
Full story: http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21728971.600 Forget particles and waves. When it comes to the true guise of material reality, what's out th...
Full story: http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21728971.600 Forget particles and waves. When it comes to the true guise of material reality, what's out th...
Read more: http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21929282.100 Reality, relativity, causality or free will? Take quantum theory at face value and at least one...
Read more: http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21929282.100 Reality, relativity, causality or free will? Take quantum theory at face value and at least one...
The oldest rocky planets yet are 11.2 billion years old, just a little younger than the universe - meaning the galaxy started building small worlds early
The oldest rocky planets yet are 11.2 billion years old, just a little younger than the universe - meaning the galaxy started building small worlds early
What was the planet like before Homo sapiens, and would it still be that way if we had never gone global? We rewind time, erase our ancestors, and hit play R...
What was the planet like before Homo sapiens, and would it still be that way if we had never gone global? We rewind time, erase our ancestors, and hit play R...
Full story: http://bit.ly/1MNJZCS
The human self has five components. Machines now have three of them. How far away is artificial consciousness – and what does it tell us about ourselves?
Full story: http://bit.ly/1MNJZCS
The human self has five components. Machines now have three of them. How far away is artificial consciousness – and what does it tell us about ourselves?
Full story: http://bit.ly/1ywcyDw
Exchanging gazes with dogs boosts levels of a bonding hormone in both them and us, suggesting they evolved to hijack a uniquely human way of bonding
Full story: http://bit.ly/1ywcyDw
Exchanging gazes with dogs boosts levels of a bonding hormone in both them and us, suggesting they evolved to hijack a uniquely human way of bonding
The explanation of one of reality's greatest mysteries could lie in physics we already know
Read more: http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21929360.700
The explanation of one of reality's greatest mysteries could lie in physics we already know
Read more: http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21929360.700
published:27 Sep 2013
views:373
Big Bang breakthrough explained with towel and apple
Full story: http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn25254 Need a giant IQ to understand the announcement about gravitational waves? Nonsense. Our video explain...
Full story: http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn25254 Need a giant IQ to understand the announcement about gravitational waves? Nonsense. Our video explain...
Full story: http://bit.ly/1CU6cdX
Reptiles rarely play on land, but now a group of "geckonauts" has been caught on camera playing with a floating collar
Full story: http://bit.ly/1CU6cdX
Reptiles rarely play on land, but now a group of "geckonauts" has been caught on camera playing with a floating collar
Full story: http://bit.ly/1Mq367P
A metal alloy that powers its own movement and deforms to get through tight spots could let us to build a Terminator 2 style robot (minus homicidal tendencies)
Full story: http://bit.ly/1Mq367P
A metal alloy that powers its own movement and deforms to get through tight spots could let us to build a Terminator 2 style robot (minus homicidal tendencies)
Full story: http://bit.ly/1FHCLz0
Camera traps set up in the remote highlands of Tibet have captured a new species of macaque – one with hairier neck and scrotum and a rounded penis
Full story: http://bit.ly/1FHCLz0
Camera traps set up in the remote highlands of Tibet have captured a new species of macaque – one with hairier neck and scrotum and a rounded penis
Full story: http://bit.ly/1eQWLqn
The growth of a rat forelimb grown in the lab offers hope that one day amputees may receive fully functional, biological replacement limbs
Full story: http://bit.ly/1eQWLqn
The growth of a rat forelimb grown in the lab offers hope that one day amputees may receive fully functional, biological replacement limbs
Full story: http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg22429960.800
There's a whole mirror world of negative temperatures reaching from minus infinity to absolute zero – now we're plumbing those depths for real
Full story: http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg22429960.800
There's a whole mirror world of negative temperatures reaching from minus infinity to absolute zero – now we're plumbing those depths for real
published:20 Nov 2014
views:6057
Atheist Experience #596: An essay in "New Scientist"
Full story: http://bit.ly/1KWXS5Y
A dramatic tale of plane crashes and poisonous berries – and you get to choose the ending. If you didn't think you need to understand probability before, you will now
Option 1: Stick with first choice https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LhanfdtCUEo
Option 2: Switch to other option https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BNKAW9mhkiE
Full story: http://bit.ly/1KWXS5Y
A dramatic tale of plane crashes and poisonous berries – and you get to choose the ending. If you didn't think you need to understand probability before, you will now
Option 1: Stick with first choice https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LhanfdtCUEo
Option 2: Switch to other option https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BNKAW9mhkiE
Full story: http://bit.ly/1ImjAeo
A busy highway in Uganda is a potential death trap, but chimps have learned to look before running across, and they even wait for those less able to cross
Full story: http://bit.ly/1ImjAeo
A busy highway in Uganda is a potential death trap, but chimps have learned to look before running across, and they even wait for those less able to cross
Full story: http://bit.ly/1ftE5xp
A thinner body isn't the only way to fit through a tight...
published:22 Jun 2015
Cockroach robot walks through narrow gap
Cockroach robot walks through narrow gap
Full story: http://bit.ly/1ftE5xp
A thinner body isn't the only way to fit through a tight gap. A new shape has helped a cockroach robot to perfect its manoeuvres
published:22 Jun 2015
views:1575
2:23
Why aliens probably exist
Full story: http://bit.ly/1scCG3H
First, try not to think about what alien life might be l...
published:11 Dec 2014
Why aliens probably exist
Why aliens probably exist
Full story: http://bit.ly/1scCG3H
First, try not to think about what alien life might be like. Then wonder whether we have any chance of finding it
published:11 Dec 2014
views:1475
2:41
How you can change the past
Full story: http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21728971.600 Forget particles and waves....
Full story: http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21728971.600 Forget particles and waves. When it comes to the true guise of material reality, what's out th...
Read more: http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21929282.100 Reality, relativity, causality or free will? Take quantum theory at face value and at least one...
The oldest rocky planets yet are 11.2 billion years old, just a little younger than the un...
published:27 Jan 2015
Ancient planets are almost as old as the universe
Ancient planets are almost as old as the universe
The oldest rocky planets yet are 11.2 billion years old, just a little younger than the universe - meaning the galaxy started building small worlds early
published:27 Jan 2015
views:12
2:36
What Earth would be like if humans never existed
What was the planet like before Homo sapiens, and would it still be that way if we had nev...
What was the planet like before Homo sapiens, and would it still be that way if we had never gone global? We rewind time, erase our ancestors, and hit play R...
Full story: http://bit.ly/1MNJZCS
The human self has five components. Machines now have th...
published:18 Mar 2015
Humanoid robot has a sense of self
Humanoid robot has a sense of self
Full story: http://bit.ly/1MNJZCS
The human self has five components. Machines now have three of them. How far away is artificial consciousness – and what does it tell us about ourselves?
published:18 Mar 2015
views:1477
1:21
Super-strong robot pulls heavy loads
Full story: http://bit.ly/1DHNohp
Two robots borrow techniques from both inchworms and gec...
published:24 Apr 2015
Super-strong robot pulls heavy loads
Super-strong robot pulls heavy loads
Full story: http://bit.ly/1DHNohp
Two robots borrow techniques from both inchworms and geckos to climb up walls while carrying huge loads
published:24 Apr 2015
views:34708
2:31
Reality revealed: The ultimate fabric of the universe
Full story here: http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21528840.500
Even trying to define ...
published:13 Mar 2014
Reality revealed: The ultimate fabric of the universe
Reality revealed: The ultimate fabric of the universe
Full story here: http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21528840.500
Even trying to define what we mean by "reality" is fraught with difficulty
published:13 Mar 2014
views:7830
2:43
Why eye contact can help you bond with dogs
Full story: http://bit.ly/1ywcyDw
Exchanging gazes with dogs boosts levels of a bonding ho...
published:16 Apr 2015
Why eye contact can help you bond with dogs
Why eye contact can help you bond with dogs
Full story: http://bit.ly/1ywcyDw
Exchanging gazes with dogs boosts levels of a bonding hormone in both them and us, suggesting they evolved to hijack a uniquely human way of bonding
published:16 Apr 2015
views:1428
1:20
Sea ghost breaks record for deepest living fish
Full story: http://bit.ly/1r3msch
A newly-discovered species with a bizarre body has been ...
published:19 Dec 2014
Sea ghost breaks record for deepest living fish
Sea ghost breaks record for deepest living fish
Full story: http://bit.ly/1r3msch
A newly-discovered species with a bizarre body has been spotted deeper down than any other living fish
published:19 Dec 2014
views:1863
2:25
Why we live in 3D
The explanation of one of reality's greatest mysteries could lie in physics we already kno...
published:27 Sep 2013
Why we live in 3D
Why we live in 3D
The explanation of one of reality's greatest mysteries could lie in physics we already know
Read more: http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21929360.700
published:27 Sep 2013
views:373
2:14
Big Bang breakthrough explained with towel and apple
Full story: http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn25254 Need a giant IQ to understand the ...
Big Bang breakthrough explained with towel and apple
Big Bang breakthrough explained with towel and apple
Full story: http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn25254 Need a giant IQ to understand the announcement about gravitational waves? Nonsense. Our video explain...
A robot has killed a contractor at one of Volkswagen's production plants in Germany, the automaker said Wednesday. See also. A robot called Hadrian wants to build you a house in two days ... ....
Saudi tycoon Prince Alwaleed bin Talal has promised to give his entire US$32 billion (HK$248 billion) fortune to charity in coming years, in one of the biggest ever such pledges. The pledge is “maybe... Earlier this year, he opened a pan-Arab news channel in Bahrain but authorities there shut the station after less than 24 hours on air and a newhome is being sought ... “I’m very healthy, enough to bike every day three hours,” he said ... ....
MAIDUGURI. Suspected Boko Haram militants killed nearly 150 people in northeastern Nigerian villages, mowing down men and children while they prayed in mosques and shooting women preparing food at home, witnesses said on Thursday ...Gunmen killed at least 97 people in Kukawa, the worst-affected village, a local who gave his name as Kolo said. “They wiped out the immediate family of my uncle... They spared nobody ... Apple Store . GooglePlay ... ....
Scientists have warned that marine life will be irreversibly changed unless CO2 emissions are drastically cut ... Twenty-two world-leading marine scientists have collaborated in the synthesis report in a special section of Science journal ... The scientists say ocean acidification is likely to impact reproduction, larval survival and feeding, and growth rates of marine organisms - especially those with calcium carbonate shells or skeletons ... ....
Misunderstood and neglected for more than 25 years, there is suddenly new hope for people diagnosed with what was once cruelly called "yuppy flu". Chronic fatigue. hope for millions (Image. Elias Larsson/Plainpicture) ... This article appeared in print under the headline "Revitalised" Subscribe to NewScientist and you'll get. NewScientist magazine delivered every week Unlimited access to all NewScientist online content -....
The original landscape? (Image...New research shows that human fires did help shape the landscape, but only after a portion had already become savannah ... This article appeared in print under the headline "Fires shape the Amazon savannah" NewScientist Not just a website! Subscribe to NewScientist and get. NewScientist magazine delivered every week Unlimited online access to articles from over 500 back issues Subscribe Now and Save ....
#Rosettawatch. COMET 67P is having a breakout ... Like other comets, 67P doesn't reflect much sunlight – it's blacker than coal ... This article appeared in print under the headline "Sinkholes and ice spotted in comet close-up" NewScientist Not just a website! Subscribe to NewScientist and get. NewScientist magazine delivered every week Unlimited online access to articles from over 500 back issues Subscribe Now and Save ....
UNPUTDOWNABLE! This go-to accolade for book reviewers takes on a new meaning this week, when some authors will be paid by the number of pages read ... This article appeared in print under the headline "The download problem" Subscribe to NewScientist and you'll get. NewScientist magazine delivered every week Unlimited access to all NewScientist online content -....
Well, scientists now think that this boiling mass may be surrounded by a pretty cool neighborhood ... And made of ice ... The ingredients needed for new stars to form is cold dust and gas. Before now, it was unreasonable to think that new stars could be born from the hot environments around black holes. However, these new findings hint that the center of the Milky Way might not quite be done with star formation just yet ... [H/T. NewScientist] ....
(Image. Michael Quinton/Minden) ... In fact it is this spectacular North American woodpecker ... (Image ... This article appeared in print under the headline "Yellow flash" NewScientist Not just a website! Subscribe to NewScientist and get. NewScientist magazine delivered every week Unlimited online access to articles from over 500 back issues Subscribe Now and Save ....
From saving the migratory paths of endangered knots to establishing new colonies of puffins, two new books show the tough challenges bird conservationists face Book information The NarrowEdge...Bob Holmes is a consultant for NewScientistNewScientist Not just a website! Subscribe to NewScientist and get. NewScientist magazine delivered every week Unlimited online access to articles from over 500 back issues Subscribe Now and Save ....
So if a higher number of donations is not fixing the problem, scientists need to find another solution to keep up with the demand ...Scientists are hopeful that the technique will work, as a study conducted a few years back demonstrated that such cells are capable of behaving like the real thing in human subjects, notes NewScientist ... [Via NewScientist and the Independent] ....
From false confessions to expert testimony that juries are ill-equipped to understand, our criminal justice system needs a radical refit, says a new book Book information Unfair... His criticisms are not new ... This article appeared in print under the headline "When justice goes wrong" Subscribe to NewScientist and you'll get. NewScientist magazine delivered every week Unlimited access to all NewScientist online content -....
But although it's an interesting study, it's not yet close to being an actual test, as our spokesperson NellBarrie points out in this NewScientist story ... Check out the beautiful "fluorescent disco world" under the sea in this NewScientist piece ... NewScientist has more on the "weedy health benefits", and for more on the evidence behind cannabis here's our in-depth blog post....
A vital part of that task was to honour the legacy of the many talented women scientists and engineers who had been written out of history ... She contributed to international publications, including Nature and NewScientist, and established a successful sideline as a media trainer and consultant....