At the edge of vision: Struggling to make sense of our cluttered world
25 November 2015As you’re driving to work along a busy road, your eyes on the traffic lights ahead, hoping they won’t turn to red, you pass signs...
Research
As you’re driving to work along a busy road, your eyes on the traffic lights ahead, hoping they won’t turn to red, you pass signs...
The Cambridge Animal Alphabet series celebrates Cambridge's connections with animals through literature, art, science and society. Here, Z is for Zebrafish as we talk to...
New analysis reveals a strong correlation between precolonial institutions in Africa and current levels of deforestation. Researchers suggest that many of these structures still operate...
The fatter we are, the more our body appears to produce a protein that inhibits our ability to burn fat, suggests new research published in...
People who show compulsive sexual behaviour – sex addiction – are driven to search more for new sexual images than their peers, according to new...
Hugh Hunt (Department of Engineering) discusses the engineering behind the V-3 “supergun”, the weapon that was meant to win the Second World War for Germany.
Replacing housing association homes sold under the new Right to Buy scheme with those for sale could drive up costs for low-income tenants and the...
The Jewish scholar Solomon Schechter is best remembered for his work on the Cairo Geniza. A conference this Sunday will explore the wider impact of...
Jacob Dunn (Division of Biological Anthropology) discusses why sperm are the most diverse cells found among animals.
Hugh Hunt (Department of Engineering) discusses whether we could directly engineer the climate and refreeze the poles.