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The Week Junior Science+Nature UK

The Week Junior Science+Nature UK

If our eyes see upside down, how does the brain flip it?

Discover just how incredible your eyes (and brain) are.

2 min  |

August 2025
The Week Junior Science+Nature UK

The Week Junior Science+Nature UK

Runaway success for young science writer

On 23 June, Hasset Kifle from St Margaret Ward Catholic Academy in Stoke-on-Trent, England, was awarded the Young Science Writer of the Year Award 2025, at a ceremony in London's Science Museum. The competition, run by the Association of British Science Writers (ABSW), is open to school students aged from 14 to 16 to submit an essay on a science, engineering, technology or maths topic. This year, the competition received a record number of 607 entries from young writers around the UK.

1 min  |

August 2025
The Week Junior Science+Nature UK

The Week Junior Science+Nature UK

Adam Kay

Meet the doctor who loves writing funny books.

3 min  |

August 2025
The Week Junior Science+Nature UK

The Week Junior Science+Nature UK

Should celebrities go to space?

Some people say only qualified astronauts should be blasting into orbit.

1 min  |

August 2025
The Week Junior Science+Nature UK

The Week Junior Science+Nature UK

Lost shipwreck discovered

In 1708, a Spanish galleon (sailing ship) called San José was sailing to Cartagena in Colombia. It was carrying about 200 tonnes of gold, silver and emeralds, which today could be worth about £15 billion.

1 min  |

August 2025
The Week Junior Science+Nature UK

The Week Junior Science+Nature UK

Horse faces show feelings

Scientists have mapped how horses use their faces to show emotion and communicate - just like humans and apes.

1 min  |

August 2025
The Week Junior Science+Nature UK

The Week Junior Science+Nature UK

The secret behaviour of sharks

These mysterious fish are one of the least understood creatures of the ocean.

3 min  |

August 2025
How It Works UK

How It Works UK

OUR TEETH EVOLVED FROM FISH 'BODY ARMOUR'

Our sensitive teeth evolved from the 'body armour' of extinct fish that lived 465 million years ago.

1 min  |

Issue 205
How It Works UK

How It Works UK

WHERE ARE YOU? WHAT'S THE TIME?

How the world's clocks and geographic coordinates came to be set by a small borough of London

5 min  |

Issue 205
How It Works UK

How It Works UK

We may finally know how paracetamol works

Acetaminophen is widely used to relieve pain, but exactly how it works has long been a mystery.

2 min  |

Issue 205
How It Works UK

How It Works UK

Tour guide to the MOON

Your dusty, distant destination awaits, with unique geology that reveals billions of years of cosmic collisions

4 min  |

Issue 205
How It Works UK

How It Works UK

20 amazing answers to curious QUESTIONS about the COSMOS

THE UNIVERSE IS FULL OF MYSTERIOUS PHENOMEN AND INCREDIBLE OBJECTS, AND WE'RE LEARNING MORE ABOUT THEM EVERY DAY

10 min  |

Issue 205
How It Works UK

How It Works UK

Are polar aurorae stronger at the North Pole?

Amazing answers to your curious questions

1 min  |

Issue 205
How It Works UK

How It Works UK

HOW TO MAKE A VIDEO GAME

Have you ever wondered how video games go from an idea to a product on a digital or physical shelf? Let's explore each step in the process

4 min  |

Issue 205
How It Works UK

How It Works UK

GLUTEN IN THE BODY

When you eat foods like a sandwich or a bowl of pasta, enzymes in your digestive system work to break down the ingredients so that nutrients can be absorbed by the body as the food passes through you.

1 min  |

Issue 205
How It Works UK

How It Works UK

SMART SURVEILLANCE

How smart CCTV uses data to scan and analyse a scene, identifying objects and people in milliseconds

4 min  |

Issue 205
How It Works UK

How It Works UK

WHAT IS GLUTEN?

Discover how this viscous and elastic protein forms, where to find it and why some people can't eat it

1 min  |

Issue 205
How It Works UK

How It Works UK

2,800-year-old royal tomb discovered near King Midas' home

Archaeologists have discovered an 8th-century BCE royal tomb of a relative of King Midas in the ancient city of Gordion, southwest of Ankara, Turkey.

2 min  |

Issue 205
How It Works UK

How It Works UK

ULTRA-FINE MAGNETIC 'CURTAINS' ON THE SUN REVEALED

The National Science Foundation's Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope, located on a summit on the island of Maui, Hawaii, captured the sharpest ever images of the Sun's surface.

1 min  |

Issue 205
How It Works UK

How It Works UK

Asteroid 2024 YR4 could hit the Moon in 2032

The James Webb Space Telescope has taken its final look at the potentially hazardous asteroid 2024 YR4 at least until the potentially hazardous space rock darkens Earth's cosmic doorstep again in 2028.

2 min  |

Issue 205
How It Works UK

How It Works UK

INSIDE THE MIND OF A GENIUS

What's going on inside the brains of those with truly exceptional mental abilities, and why are they so intelligent? Genetic analysis and Einstein's brain are providing us with some answers

6 min  |

Issue 205
How It Works UK

How It Works UK

HOW PLANES LAND ON WATER

Who needs a runway when there's so much water around?

2 min  |

Issue 205
How It Works UK

How It Works UK

WHY ARE BUBBLES ROUND?

How surface tension plays a big role in keeping soap bubbles spherical

3 min  |

Issue 205
How It Works UK

How It Works UK

NEW VEHICLE BATTERY FULLY RECHARGES IN 18 SECONDS

A British firm has received approval to mass produce an ultra-high power density electric vehicle (EV) battery that can be fully recharged in just 18 seconds.

1 min  |

Issue 205
How It Works UK

How It Works UK

ANCIENT ANIMAL SURVIVAL SECRETS

Discover the remarkable resilience of Earth's oldest and hardiest animals, overcoming mass extinctions and conquering the planet's ever-changing climate

8 min  |

Issue 205
How It Works UK

How It Works UK

JOHN FLAMSTEED

The first Astronomer Royal plotted out the constellations and mapped the heavens

2 min  |

Issue 205
How It Works UK

How It Works UK

Researchers uncover the truth about the Moon's orange glass beads

When the Apollo astronauts first set foot on the lunar surface, they expected to find grey rocks and dust. What they didn't anticipate was discovering something that looked almost magical - tiny, brilliant orange glass beads scattered across the Moon's landscape like microscopic gems. These beads, each smaller than a grain of sand, are actually ancient time capsules from when the Moon was volcanically active billions of years ago. The beads formed some 3.3 to 3.6 billion years ago during volcanic eruptions on the surface of the then-young satellite.

1 min  |

Issue 205
How It Works UK

How It Works UK

INTOLERANCE TYPES

Gluten isn't for everyone. When some people consume gluten, they experience pain and other negative gastrointestinal symptoms.

1 min  |

Issue 205
How It Works UK

How It Works UK

Roman-era 'fast food' discovered in an ancient Mallorcan rubbish heap

Songbirds were on the menu 2,000 years ago on the Roman island of Mallorca, archaeological evidence reveals.

2 min  |

Issue 205
How It Works UK

How It Works UK

Covering poo lagoons could cut most dairy farm methane

Dairy farms produce huge amounts of potent greenhouse gases.

2 min  |

Issue 205