London museum finds 1883 SMH inside one-tonne sunfish​
A piece of the Herald found inside a giant fish shows not much has changed since 1883.
A piece of the Herald found inside a giant fish shows not much has changed since 1883.
During the 50 years we have been able take photos of Earth from space, we have become somewhat blase about the little blue planet on which we live.
When it was discovered in Israel in 1970, the En-Gedi scroll was clearly in no shape to be read. Now, 40 years alter, researchers
Tiangong 1, China's first space laboratory, will come to a fiery end in late 2017.
Aboriginal Australians are found to have the closest genetic links to Highland Papua New Guinea populations, providing new insights into the movement of early humans following their dispersal from Africa.
By corralling mathematics and science as (male) subjects for the unimaginative and the arts as (female) subjects of expression, we commit educational crimes.
Male redbacks have a previously unknown evolutionary trick to mate more than once.
After 4.5 billion years of existence, Comet 332P is dragging a growing trail of debris 4800 kilometres long.
The Turnbull government has set itself the goal of establishing the CSIRO as the "world's premier public research organisation" within 10 years.
It could soon become easier to remove blood clots or get rid of pesticides from waterways thanks to new research carried out at the Australian National University.
A concerted effort is underway to save the endangered golden shouldered parrot of remote Cape York.
A Sydney Uni study finds evidence of bias in industry-funded research into artificial sweeteners.
A snowboarding accident left Emily James paralysed. A new UTS centre is offering hope for her community.
A visiting Yale professor believes social networks can be used for good - but is there something a little Big Brother about it all?
A European star-surveying satellite has pinned down the positions and brightness of 1.14 billion stars, putting it on track to create the most accurate three-dimensional map of the Milky Way and better understand the evolution of the galaxy.
The US space agency is taking images of the Great Barrier Reef from 8.5 kilometres up in a specially equipped jet to gain a better understanding of what humans are doing to the largest living thing on Earth.
Far down in a South African gold mine, scientists are studying tiny life-forms that live in eternal darkness. The conditions provide insights into where life might exist elsewhere.
It's a promising step into a post-antibiotic world.
Did you know that the venom of a carnivorous sea snail can send an unsuspecting fish into a sugar coma? That's weird for a start, right? But get this: snail venom might also be behind the next generation of ultra-fast-acting insulin for diabetics.
The stingray? Yep, Bryan Fry knows it well. He's been stung multiple times. The jagged tear of the puncture wound is nothing compared to the venom that causes mind blowing pain. But it's not the worst Australian wildlife has to offer.
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