
How rural English women used scrapbooks to commemorate the death of Winston Churchill
Sixty years ago, on January 24, Britons gathered around their radios to listen to the sombre BBC announcement that Sir Winston Churchill had died at the age of 90. Others learned about the news at church, as they listened...

The EU was built for another age – here’s how it must adapt to survive
To European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen, Europe is like a Volkswagen Beetle an iconic car produced by a once-mighty German manufacturer which has been struggling to adapt to a new world. Europe must shift...

Right now, approximately 20 billion red blood cells are busy travelling through your blood vessels. They are delivering oxygen to all the different tissues in your body and removing carbon dioxide to be breathed out of...

How the war in Ukraine has made flying worse for the climate
Some long-haul flights connecting Europe and Asia are emitting 40% more CO₂ since the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, my new study shows. The spike is largely due to airspace closures above conflict zones...

AI is transforming the search for new materials that can help create the technologies of the future
From the bronze age to the Industrial Revolution and beyond, the discovery and development of new materials has been a driving force in human history. These novel materials have helped advance technology and shape...

Gut-wrenching love: What a fresh look at the ‘Good Samaritan’ story says for ethics today
The Bible story of the Good Samaritan is more than a mainstay of Sunday school courses. Good samaritan is the catch-all way to describe a do-gooder someone who stops to change the tire of a stranded motorist, helps a lost...

How the human neck became a locus of power, beauty and frailty
I broke its neck. When making a vase at the potters wheel, I torqued its slippery neck clear off the pot as I tried to thin it into a graceful curve. I find vases gratifying to make and their shapes especially pleasing to...