
Forbidden Territories at The Hepworth Wakefield: a bold celebration of surrealism’s 100th birthday
Forbidden Territories: 100 years of Surreal Landscapes, a new exhibition showing at The Hepworth Wakefield, is a bold and engaging exploration of the important, if unwieldy, body of work that comes under the category of...

Gaza: why it’s difficult to reach a legal judgment of genocide against Israel
Israel recently closed its embassy in Ireland, blaming its decision on Irelands allegedly extreme anti-Israel policies. This followed the Irish government announcement that it would formally intervene in the South African...

How a giant prehistoric elephant skull helped untangle an evolutionary mystery
400,000 years ago, early humans in Europe, Asia and Africa lived alongside giant straight-tusked elephants, far bigger than their modern-day cousins. Their evolution has long been a mystery to palaeontologists, but an...

Mobile payments used to be less ‘painful’ than using cash. That might be changing
The act of handing over hard-earned cash has long been associated with pain. And historically, research has also found that consumers tended to spend less using cash rather than a payment card. In a study from the early...

Reactions to the UnitedHealthcare CEO slaying reveal American divides on crime and punishment
The killing of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, while a stark reflection of frustration with the American health insurance industry, also highlights a longstanding and contradictory cultural fascination in the United...

The Moon might be older than scientists previously thought − a new study shines light on its history
A physicist, a chemist and a mathematician walk into a bar. It sounds like the start of a bad joke, but in my case, it was the start of an idea that could reshape how scientists think about the history of the Moon. The...

Play for the planet: five climate change games for the festive season
Although most people in the UK are worried about climate change, disagreement about what to do can be polarising, especially at Christmas when norms around travel, presents and waste are at the forefront of peoples...