Health The covid-19 pandemic isn't over – and it won't end any time soon JUST over two years since the official start of the pandemic, tens of millions of people in China have entered lockdown. It is a striking reminder of how things started, and that, despite the feeling in some countries, things are far from over. At the end of January, the huge global wave of covid-19 caused … 51¶¯Âþ
Technology Watch emu-inspired robot legs that use less energy to run Robotic legs that mimic flightless running birds like emus and use just two motors per leg can run more efficiently than more complex devices 51¶¯Âþ
Mind Brain scanning studies are usually too small to find reliable results Most studies that have used MRI machines to find links between the brain’s structure or function and complex mental traits had an average of 23 participants, but thousands are needed to find reliable results 51¶¯Âþ
Life Vibrant rainbow-hued wrasse is officially named a new species The newly described rose-veiled fairy wrasse is among the greatest living embodiments of a rainbow seen in nature, as this colourful image shows Regulars
Humans Jim Al-Khalili on the joy of science and how to stay curious Physicist and broadcaster Jim Al-Khalili discusses the power of wonder, the importance of overcoming our biases and the biggest mysteries in fundamental physics Features
Humans Bug Out review: A $50,000 insect heist gets the Tiger King treatment A true-crime series on IMDb TV takes a slightly too po-faced look into a theft from an invertebrate zoo where things weren't quite as they seemed Culture
Puzzle #160: How far was the photographer from the Loch Ness monster? #160 Blurry-Ness Click! The camera shutter opened and closed just as the creature's head ducked back beneath the surface of the lake, creating a large ripple. "I got it! I finally got a picture of the Loch Ness monster!" exclaimed Lily. She looked at the result on her digital camera. "It's blurry!" She hung her … Regulars
Humans Academics discover we find boring people boring and don’t like them A scintillating piece of research into the traits we associate with boring people, plus Feedback’s take on whether there are more doors or wheels in the world, and an asteroid half the size of a giraffe Regulars