
BBC Earth
Migratory Birds Can Benefit From Merging Coffee Plantations With Colombian Forests
Rather than clearing Colombian forests to make way for coffee plantations, merging the two could benefit migratory birds.
6 min |
March - April 2020

BBC Earth
The Sharpest Tools
Tool use is not restricted to humans and is found throughout nature. Here are some of earth’s most innovative animals
3 min |
March - April 2020

BBC Earth
In Defence Of Monty
For 50 years, historians have lined up to attack the architect of D-Day. But, writes James Holland, their criticisms are misguided
9 min |
March - April 2020

BBC Earth
What Would Alien Life Actually Look Like?
As we discover ever more planets orbiting other stars, and plan missions to potentially habitable moons of Saturn and Jupiter, will we find life – and if we do, will we even recognise it?
10+ min |
March - April 2020

BBC Earth
Why Tummy Noises May Indicate Health Problems
Listen carefully, the gurgles of a grumbling belly could be a cry for help.
2 min |
March - April 2020

Mía.
El coronavirus – Todas las medidas efectivas de prevención
Con el nuevo virus surgido en China ya en casa, el pánico se apodera de la población, algo que los expertos sanitarios intentan evitar lanzando un mensaje de calma y recordando que la tasa de mortalidad sigue siendo más baja que la de la gripe común.
5 min |
Issue No 1.743

EL Singapore
Helping Through Innovation
STEAM continues to be hot property in education – including here in Singapore – and when you see students using it in amazing ways, you can understand why.
2 min |
February 2020

BBC Earth
How Britain Saved Einstein
Exiled, homeless and on the run from Nazi assassins, 1933 was a grim year for Albert Einstein. Yet not all was lost, writes Andrew Robinson, as the famous physicist discovered during his visits to Britain
7 min |
January - February 2020

BBC Earth
The Hunt For Planet 9
Beyond Neptune, a handful of small worlds are moving in harmony. Astronomers think they might be dancing to the tune of a third world lurking in the darkness, one that’s four times bigger than Earth and significant enough to be named our Solar System’s ninth planet. Now they think they know exactly where to look for it…
8 min |
January - February 2020

BBC Earth
When Great Minds Thought Alike
Far from working in isolation, artists and scientists have drawn inspiration from one another for 250 years – as Tilly Blyth, curator of a new Science Museum exhibition, tells Ellie Cawthorne
5 min |
November - December 2019

BBC Earth
Technicolour Dinosaurs
New discoveries of dinosaurs’ colours and patterns are revealing how these ancient beasts lived
9 min |
November - December 2019

BBC Earth
Salt Of The Earth
Salt has a life far beyond the dinner table. From land speed records to ancient lakes, this mineral is intimately tied to our lives and our land
4 min |
November - December 2019

SME Magazine Singapore
Of Datukships And Doctorates
Bought degrees including MBAs and doctorates are rampant in this country.
2 min |
February 2019

The Finder Singapore
Nurturing Young Minds
Learn more about Kinderland’s award-winning STREAM programme.
1 min |
Issue 299

PORTFOLIO Magazine
The Learning Revolution — Online Learning In Education
Singapore has always been known as an academically driven country that provides fertile ground for world-class education.
1 min |
July 2019

Hong Kong Tatler
High Marks In Happiness
A course in improving personal well-being has become an Ivy League university’s most popular class of all time—and it’s free. Madeleine Ross decided to put it to the test
7 min |
July 2019
BBC Earth
The Motherhood Revolution
Of all the changes to sweep the west over the past 400 years, perhaps none have had a greater impact on women’s lives than the fall in family sizes. Sarah Knott tells the story of the great fertility decline, from the large broods of 17th-century America to the one-children families of postwar London
7 min |
July - August 2019

BBC Earth
Monster Movers
Think moving house is difficult? Take a look at the gargantuan machines that are needed to move rockets, wind turbines, Antarctic bases and even entire buildings
4 min |
July - August 2019

BBC Earth
Fossil Of First Known Perching Bird Found
Specimen holds clues to the origin of more than half of current bird species.
1 min |
July - August 2019

BBC Earth
Exploring Ethics
Dr Deborah Bowman spent more than 20 years researching medical ethics, but a 2017 breast cancer diagnosis made her reconsider everything
4 min |
July - August 2019

BBC Earth
Aleks Krotoski On … Autoreply Option Predictive Systems Are Biased
There is an old idea in the Highlands of Scotland that the 12, 13 and 14 of February are ‘borrowed’ from January.
2 min |
July - August 2019

BBC Earth
“THIS YEAR, I MIGHT GO VEGAN…”
This year I am contemplating giving veganism a go. At least temporarily. And perhaps just for a couple of weeks.
2 min |
March 2019

BBC Earth
Tango In Patagonia
On one remote windswept lakes near the tip of South America, the world’s rarest grebes have been given their own bodyguards
7 min |
March 2019

BBC Earth
Sea Shells On The Sea Shore
There’s more to limpets than meets the eye. From their remarkable homing instinct to body-slamming defence mechanisms and super-strong teeth, these sea snails are amazing creatures
5 min |
February 2019

BBC Earth
My Brain Made Me Do It
A growing body of research has found that head injury can make people more prone to criminal behaviour…
9 min |
February 2019

BBC Earth
Anglo-Saxon Beasts Of Death
For 10th-century warriors, the appearance of wolves, ravens and eagles on the battlefield meant an unlucky few had been chosen to die. Eric Lacey digs into a grisly superstition
5 min |
February 2019

BBC Earth
Could Neanderthal Mind Reveal What Made Modern Humans A Successful Species?
Scientists are growing ‘mini-brains’ containing Neanderthal genes. Could they reveal what made modern humans such a successful species?
7 min |
January 2019

BBC Earth
Helen Czerski On...Sand
Why Does Sand Go Dry When You Step On It?
3 min |
January 2019

BBC Earth
The Battle That Broke The Germans
When the Allies launched an offensive at Amiens 100 years ago this month, they did so with such precision and power that enemy troops were soon surrendering in their thousands. Nick Lloyd describes a battle that shattered German morale, and asks, why is it not more celebrated today?
9 min |
January 2019

BBC Earth
The Last Word
MICHAEL MOSLEY ON … SCIENTISTS “HOW A PAIR OF MAVERICK SCIENTISTS CHANGED MANY LIVES”
2 min |