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Science

  • abstract image that looks like human teeth, but is in fact an aerial photo taken by a drone looking down on formations at the edge of a salt lake in Western Australia

    The long read
    Teeth as time capsules: Soviet secrets and my dentist grandmother

    The long read: In postwar Warsaw, my grandmother Zosia fixed the teeth of prisoners and spies. In doing so, she came into contact with the hidden history of her times in a way few others could
  • A partial eclipse was visible at several locations including Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay and Hawaii

    0:41

    Solar eclipses
    Timelapse: 'ring of fire' forms during solar eclipse at Easter Island – video

  • Cells in the brain of an adult fruit fly

    Neuroscience
    Tiny brain, big deal: fruit fly diagram could transform neuroscience

  • The comet photographed before dawn from Temisas, on the island of Gran Canaria, Spain.

    Astronomy
    Comet last seen in stone age to make closest approach to Earth

  • Bernard Morgan saluting in uniform with medals

    Ageing
    Number of centenarians in England and Wales may have hit a peak, figures show

  • A spiky agave-type plant on a mountain-side of grass and rocks

    Environment
    Botanists identify 33 global ‘dark spots’ with thousands of unknown plants

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  • Woman in pink bra holding a pink ribbon

    US breast cancer deaths fall but younger women increasingly diagnosed – study

  • Oysters on seabed

    Europe’s exhausted oyster reefs ‘once covered area size of Northern Ireland’

  • 3D rendering of Covid-19

    Everything you need to know about Covid this autumn – podcast

  • Newborn baby undergoes neonatal heel prick screening 'Guthrie test' where blood drops fall / blood drop falls onto a Guthrie card.

    NHS England to screen 100,000 babies for more than 200 genetic conditions

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  • GP writing a prescription

    Mental health overtakes cancer and obesity as Britons’ biggest health worry

  • An Indian doctor stands by a patient in a bed holding up an X-ray while two female medics in white coats stand beside him

    ‘You feel omnipresent’: bringing city care to India’s country hospitals

  • An NHS member of staff looks at the results of a lung scan.

    UK facing ‘tsunami of missed cancers’ in wake of pandemic, experts say

  • Yellowing, transparent skin on a hand and forearm

    Transparent skin, bird flu, and why girls’ brains aged during Covid: the week in science – podcast

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  • Catherine Bennett

    Any ice-age telepaths out there? Please explain why Netflix is revisiting Ancient Apocalypse

    Catherine Bennett
  • Sally Davies

    The world is facing an antibiotic emergency: a data-led plan of action is needed now

    Sally Davies
  • Elle Hunt

    British beer drinkers, face the truth: a pint is too big, a half is too small – all hail the two-thirds measure

    Elle Hunt
  • Arwa Mahdawi

    Trump says he’s the ‘leader’ on IVF, but Republicans are blocking national access

    Arwa Mahdawi
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  • A train passes the cooling towers of Ratcliffe-on-Soar power station

    End of an era: Britain finally says goodbye to coal – podcast

  • Underwater image of the beautiful marine environment, sea grass and fish species

    Is the ocean becoming too acidic to sustain life? – podcast

    Industrial civilisation is close to breaching a seventh planetary boundary, and may already have crossed it, according to scientists who have compiled the latest report on the state of the world’s life-support systems. They say ocean acidification is close to critical threshold, posing a threat to marine ecosystems and global liveability. Ian Sample speaks to Prof Helen Findlay, a biological oceanographer at the Plymouth Marine Laboratory, to find out why the oceans have reached this state, and whether there is anything we can do to reverse the damage.
  • An elderly woman kisses a young girl on the cheek as they sit next to a birthday cake with the number 100 on top. Photo: Getty Images

    Are the world’s oldest people really that old? – podcast

    Madeleine Finlay speaks to Dr Saul Newman, an interdisciplinary researcher at University College London and the University of Oxford, who has just won an Ig Nobel prize – given to scientific research that ‘first makes people laugh, and then makes them think’ – for his work showing that many claims of people living extraordinarily long lives come from places with short lifespans, no birth certificates, and where clerical errors and pension fraud abound
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Key issues

  • An illustration of an asteroid falling towards Earth.

    Physics
    Nuclear blast could save Earth from large asteroid, scientists say

  • 3D rendering of Covid-19

    Biology
    Everything you need to know about Covid this autumn – podcast

    • Space
      Comet last seen in stone age to make closest approach to Earth

    • Genetics
      NHS England to screen 100,000 babies for more than 200 genetic conditions

    • Medical research
      Everything you need to know about Covid this autumn – podcast

    • Psychology
      Is being a cynic bad for you? Here’s what I learned

  • box purple

    Alex Bellos's Monday puzzle
    Did you solve it? The box problem that baffled the boffins

  • box

    Alex Bellos's Monday puzzle
    Can you solve it? The box problem that baffled the boffins

  • poker hands. Image shot 2008. Exact date unknown.<br>APJ9PY poker hands. Image shot 2008. Exact date unknown.

    Alex Bellos's Monday puzzle
    Did you solve it? The poker puzzle that has everyone fooled

  • poker hands. Image shot 2008. Exact date unknown.<br>APJ9PY poker hands. Image shot 2008. Exact date unknown.

    Alex Bellos's Monday puzzle
    Can you solve it? The poker puzzle that has everyone fooled

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Multimedia

  • An aircraft flies past the supermoon as it rises in Brisbane, Australia.

    Glowing September supermoon lights up the sky – in pictures

  • The partial lunar eclipse was visible across parts of Europe, Africa, North and South America

    1:03

    Supermoon with partial lunar eclipse charms stargazers across the world – video

    The partial lunar eclipse was visible across parts of Europe, Africa, North and South America
  • The winners of the Nikon Small World in Motion video competition have been announced, with zoologist Dr Bruno Vellutini's video showing the processes of fly embryogenesis taking first prize

    1:14

    Stunning microscopic worlds captured in video competition – video

    The winners of the Nikon Small World in Motion video competition have been announced, with zoologist Dr Bruno Vellutini's video showing the processes of fly embryogenesis taking first prize
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