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Neurons that restore walking in patients with spinal cord injuries have been identified. Read more
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Neurons that restore walking in paralysed patients
Neurons that restore walking in patients with spinal cord injuries have been identified.
Online harassment of Covid scientists
Virologists studying Covid-19 have been subject to online threats.
A distant planet’s atmosphere
A distant planet's atmosphere
COVID spreads in China
Ancient warmth in Greenland
Climate change in the Arctic
Fusion milestone
Fusion milestone - the science behind the headlines
Mosquito pesticide failing
The James Webb Space Telescope - the first 6 months
NASA's James Webb Telescope: science in the images
One year on from the Tonga eruption
We take a look at everything we’ve learnt since the Tonga volcano erupted a year ago.
Atmospheric rivers
The phenomenon driving California’s extreme weather
Climate science activism
What happens when climate scientists take to the streets?
Bird flu (H5N1) outbreak in mink
A review of the first mammal to mammal transmission of avian flu, observed in Spain
Science on ice
The different forms of frozen water from ice made in labs to Jupiter’s icy moons
Turkey-Syria earthquake
Turkey’s most powerful earthquake on record
CRISPR & bioethics
He Jiankui refuses to talk about his controversial genome editing of twin babies in 2018.
Cyclone Freddy batters Madagascar
Cyclone Freddy batters Madagascar and threatens Mozambique and South Africa.
Drought worsens in East Africa
Why the long rains in East Africa are forecast to fail again.
Human genome editing: Promise and Peril
What are the benefits and limitations of gene editing?
Return of Cyclone Freddy
Record-breaking Cyclone Freddy devastates Mozambique for the second time in one month.
Animals at the Wuhan Market
What does animal DNA from the Wuhan Market reveal about the start of the pandemic?
Coronation exploration
Why are rituals so important to humans - and why do they often involve precious objects?
Co-operation and cohesion
Social cohesion, cellular cohesion and glue. Science stories inspired by election news
Signals, seaweed and space
The anniversary of the telegraph sparks an unexpected conversation about bioelectricity.
Migrate ideas
The science behind migration, a wall of wind and the real life human labour ing AI
Collapsing pensions and civilisations
French pension protests lead us to the lifespans of people, naked mole rats and societies
Wildfires and wild animals
Smog in North America leads us to conservationists using air pollution to track animals.
Hayfever, paleobotany and snot palaces
Why does pollen make us sick, what it tells us about the past; and a look at snot palaces
Predictions from the sky and murderous fish
Celebrations of Eid send us on a science-filled odyssey to the stars.
Unexpected elements on the sea bed
The team discover mysterious potato shaped nodules and hydroelectric power in your garden
Nato and the left-handed universe
Nato’s summit has us considering decision-making and the balance of the universe
Barbie in Space
How Barbie is helping humans return to the moon, and is the colour pink actually real?