Life Three-parent babies: It's more messy than we thought Mitochondrial replacement lets a child's cells use power packs from a donor. But if the donor can pass on other traits, that really complicates the ethics Opinion
Earth Your shopping comes from illegally deforested land Palm oil comes first Every time we go shopping we fill our trolleys with contraband without knowing it. It turns out that commercial plantation owners and food companies are the worst offenders at illegally cutting down the rainforest. These are the same firms that fill our supermarket shelves with everything from beef and biscuits to … 51¶¯Âþ
Life The woman who saved Mongolia's stolen dinosaurs Though illegal for more than a century, looting Mongolian dinosaur fossils was commonplace – until culture minister Oyungerel Tsedevdamba stepped in Opinion
Space station is safe from US-Russia squabbles We come in peace TROUBLE below may not mean trouble above. While Russia's relationship with the rest of the world has been rocky since it annexed Crimea from Ukraine in the spring, experts say the International Space Station, at least, may be untouched. Space is hardly the most pressing consequence of Russia's actions in Crimea, … 51¶¯Âþ
Life Meet the ancient megatrees of arid lands (Images: Elaine Ling ) THE devil upended the baobab and planted it upside down. So says Arab legend. In Burkino Faso and Tanzania, folklore has it that the tree wouldn't stop walking, so God planted it with root-feet in the air and branches underground. A Zimbabwean version has it that God inverted the tree in … Regulars
Life Daydream believers: Is imagination our greatest skill? Video: Testing a child's imagination Our capacity to create imaginary worlds could be key to our health as well as the power behind the rise of human civilisation IT WAS during the Abix-Rontu war for control of the solar system that the planets Rorkak and Slockland were formed. The war had erupted when two 6-year-old … Features
Was Aristotle the inventor of science? Today's biologists think like Aristotle (Image: Prisma/UIG/Getty Images) The ancient Greek philosopher deserves our homage, and Armand Marie Leroi delivers it in his edifying and excellent book EVERY generation of biologist must rediscover Aristotle for itself, to paraphrase Armand Leroi in a BBC documentary, Aristotle's Lagoon . Four years on, Leroi, a biologist at Imperial … CultureLab
Feedback: Who could like weird science? Feedback is our weekly column of bizarre stories, implausible advertising claims, confusing instructions and more Who could like weird science? WHAT products, Feedback asked, "might contain, and proudly proclaim, 'weird science'?" Opening a message from Brian Burbage, we realised we'd rather set ourselves a trap. The term "weird science", he writes, "could be used to … Regulars