
The Week Junior Science+Nature UK
Cleopatra's lost tomb
You told us that historical mysteries capture your imaginations, so here's an ancient Egyptian riddle.
2 min |
Issue 75

The Week Junior Science+Nature UK
ALIEN HUNTERS
JD Savage blasts off on an out-of-this world quest to find life beyond Earth's borders.
5 min |
Issue 75

The Week Junior Science+Nature UK
What happens to the ocean if we take out all the fish?
Find out about the vital role fish play in sea life.
3 min |
Issue 75

The Week Junior Science+Nature UK
ROAR POWER
Scratch the myths - Isabel Thomas earns her stripes and reveals the truth behind tigers' extra-ROAR-dinary powers.
5 min |
Issue 75

The Week Junior Science+Nature UK
Kate Speller
For our readers' issue, we met a zookeeper who works with big cats.
3 min |
Issue 75

The Week Junior Science+Nature UK
The brains between the sticks
Is it true that goalkeepers see the world differently?
2 min |
Issue 75

The Week Junior Science+Nature UK
NATURE IN FOCUS
Join in with Science+Nature's trail at Cheltenham Science Festival.
3 min |
Issue 75

The Week Junior Science+Nature UK
Orangutan uses plants to heal wound
For the first time ever, a wild animal has been observed healing a wound using a plant as medicine.
1 min |
Issue 75

The Week Junior Science+Nature UK
THE LAB
Three things to make and do
3 min |
Issue 75

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
Stones of the SOLSTICE
Jamie Carter explores 12 ancient stones, tombs and temples across the world that align with the Sun at the solstice
7 min |
June 2024

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
The spirit of the eclipse
Eclipse chaser Yvette Cook reports on what it was like in the path of totality in Texas during 8 April's Great American Eclipse
8 min |
June 2024

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
Unearthing galaxies in the archives
Comparing old Hubble data to today is revealing distant active galaxies
2 min |
June 2024

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
Manhattanhenge
New York's urban island of Manhattan, with its gridiron street layout, sees summer Suns set neatly between skyscrapers. Jamie Carter explains the phenomenon
3 min |
June 2024

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
Surfing spacetime with LISA
A new era of gravitational wave astronomy is on its way as the ambitious upcoming LISA space mission joins a host of huge detectors on Earth. Charlie Hoy explains
7 min |
June 2024

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
A very British eclipse
In 1927, Britain experienced its first total solar eclipse since 1724. Mike Frost looks at how, like 8 April 2024's US spectacle, eclipse fever swept the nation
5 min |
June 2024

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
Cosmic rays
In part two of our series, Govert Schilling looks at cosmic rays, the high-energy particles that bombard Earth from space
3 min |
June 2024

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
A quicker way to colourise your narrowband frames
Create a bicolour image in Siril using data from just two narrowband filters
2 min |
June 2024

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
When Haydn met the Herschels
Jonathan Powell on how the astronomer siblings inspired the famous composer
2 min |
June 2024

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
Voyager 1 is back online and exploring the unknown
An interstellar rescue brings the venerable spacecraft back after months out of action
2 min |
June 2024

How It Works UK
COULD A SUPERNOVA WORDS ANDREW MAY ENGULF EARTH?
We put some intriguing, baffling and bizarre space questions under the spotlight
8 min |
Issue 190

How It Works UK
A drone with a rotating detonation rocket engine' approached the speed of sound
venus Aerospace has completed the inaugural test flight of a drone fitted with its rotating detonation rocket engine (RDRE), accelerating it to just under the speed of sound.
2 min |
Issue 190

How It Works UK
DNA reveals that ancient American lineage goes back 18,000 years
Members of the Blackfoot Confederacy have an ancient lineage that goes back 18,000 years. This means that Indigenous peoples living in the Great Plains of Montana and southern Alberta today can trace their origins to ice age predecessors.
2 min |
Issue 190

How It Works UK
A group of 60 ultra-faint stars could be a new type of galaxy
A stronomers have spotted the faintest and lightest satellite galaxy ever found: a minuscule, tight-knit group of stars trailing the Milky Way.
2 min |
Issue 190

How It Works UK
An underwater mountain hosts creatures unknown to science
An underwater mountain chain off Rapa Nui, also known as Easter Island, hosts an astonishing array of deep-sea species, at least 50 of which are new to science.
2 min |
Issue 190

How It Works UK
Understanding MENTAL HEALTH
Take a tour of the brain to discover the origins of anxiety and how to tackle it
8 min |
Issue 190

How It Works UK
HOW STONEHENGE WAS BUILT
Who built this stone circle and how was this ancient feat of engineering pulled off?
6 min |
Issue 190

How It Works UK
A sleeping subduction zone could swallow the Atlantic
A subduction zone below the Gibraltar Strait is creeping westward and could one day ‘invade’ the Atlantic Ocean, causing the ocean to slowly close up.
2 min |
Issue 190

How It Works UK
WHAT ARE ULTRAPROCESSED FOODS?
Some natural products are drastically transformed by the food industry, and regularly eating them can affect our health
3 min |
Issue 190

How It Works UK
ANIMALS ON THE BRINK
Meet some of the most critically endangered animals from around the world and discover why they're on the brink of extinction
10 min |
Issue 190

The Week Junior Science+Nature UK
The largest plane to ever fly
Take a first look at the mighty Radia WindRunner aircraft
1 min |