One creature's secret to long life? No sex until 150
The Greenland shark can live to the age of 400, making it the world's longest-living vertebrate
The Greenland shark can live to the age of 400, making it the world's longest-living vertebrate
Sydney Science Festival started with a bang on Thursday night at the Powerhouse Museum.
What or who was behind this outback murder-mystery?
Figuring out how to make fire was no doubt an evolutionary boon to our ancestors. But it may have led to our smoking habit and the emergence of tuberculosis.
Three tiny craft built in Australia are the first locally made satellites to go into space in 15 years.
Gaming can boost students' school performance and should be incorporated into classroom activities.
Smashing atoms right in the centre of Sydney.
The vision? "A world where where all babies, whether breastfed or formula-fed, are equally healthy, happy and strong."
They have lived among us for close to 4000 years. You've likely seen scuttle solo over railway tracks. Or heard nighttime gnawing in your walls or ceiling. Most of the time, you don't even know they're there. And that's the way they like it.
Along with Brian Cox you can explore the secret life of eels, indigenous science and biohacking at Science Week.
A non-invasive technique developed by the Australian Synchrotron has revealed a hidden portrait beneath a Degas painting.
World practically bursting with intense volcanic activity has unique interactions with its host planet.
Unclear standards mean we aren't quite sure what we're feeding our favourite little purr balls.
Discovery a reminder that the cosmos is still rife with startling secrets.
Scientists are finding ways to harvest our e-waste stockpiles and transform them into valuable metal alloys.
A camera pans the craggy Pacific Ocean floor. A crab lies motionless, its spindly legs sprawled into the dirt.
Spider silk's little understood ability to control sound opens the door to a new field of materials science.
Early humans wandered the Earth before this star was even born - and scientists aren't sure why it is forming where it is.
No one knew what lay within the grey chunk of rock - or how significant it would prove to be.
Advances in cloning research have potential to develop cells for organ regeneration.
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