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Updated 2025-09-11 22:16
VIDEO: Abandoned horses 'crisis' - RSPCA
The RSPCA says it is looking after so many abandoned horses, donkeys and ponies that it cannot take in any more.
VIDEO: £135k to move voles: Money well spent?
£135,000 was spent relocating water voles so work could begin dredging two Somerset rivers in 2014.
LHC fixes glitch, prepares for beams
The short circuit delaying the restart of the Large Hadron Collider has been fixed, after a blast of high current melted the metal particle responsible.
US makes climate pledge to UN
The US has pledged to tackle climate change by cutting its carbon emissions 26-28% by 2025.
New renewables break capacity bar
New renewable generating capacity broke the 100GW barrier in 2014, equivalent to the entire fleet of nuclear power plants in the US, a UN report shows.
Ants in space grapple with zero-g
A study finds that ants on board the International Space Station still use teamwork to search new areas, despite falling off the walls of their containers for up to eight seconds.
Indian monsoon's past analysed
Fossils from the ocean floor are yielding clues to the Indian monsoon millions of years ago.
VIDEO: The secret language of whales
Researchers at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington say whale communication depends on jaw movements and the methods these mammals use to catch food.
Is fibre key to connecting Africa?
Is fibre key to connecting Africa?
VIDEO: Taste testing desert's solar plant water
A new multimillion dollar project that uses solar power to treat underground saline water is offering a ray of hope in south east Pakistan.
Solar aeroplane lands in China
Solar Impulse, the fuel-free aeroplane, lands in Chongqing, China, to complete leg five of its attempt to fly around the world.
Mercury 'painted black' by comets
The mystery of Mercury's dark surface can be explained by a steady dusting of carbon from passing comets, research suggests.
VIDEO: How porpoises use sound to hunt
Researchers in Denmark have discovered that porpoises can adjust the beams of sound they use to hunt.
Porpoises use 'sound searchlights'
Porpoises finely adjust the size of the beams of sound they use to hunt - using sound like a searchlight to trap their prey, a study finds.
VIDEO: Solar plane takes off in Myanmar
The Solar Impulse 2 plane has departed from Mandalay in Myanmar as part of its round-the-world flight, Kasia Madera reports
Graphene light bulb set for shops
A light bulb made with graphene - said by its UK developers to be the first commercially viable consumer product using the super-strong carbon - is to go on sale later this year.
VIDEO: A year in space: Soyuz docks at ISS
A Russian Soyuz spacecraft has docked at the International Space Station carrying three astronauts, two of whom are due to spend a record 12 months there.
Duo begin year-long space trip
US astronaut Scott Kelly and Russian cosmonaut Mikhail Kornienko arrive for a 12-month tour of duty on the International Space Station.
What is the point of the Large Hadron Collider?
What are the justifications for the £4bn Large Hadron Collider?
What drives people to murder-suicide?
What drives people to murder-suicide?
Greens ‘want 1% of GDP for science’
A pledge by the Greens to double science funding contrasts with the statements offered by five other party leaders, answering a call to set out their policies on science.
VIDEO: Eels journey from Bermuda and back
Millions of eels have been arriving in the south-west of England having travelled thousands of miles from the Sargasso Sea near Bermuda.
'Cat litter mix' closed nuclear site
A team of experts says a mixture that included organic cat litter forced the closure of the only underground nuclear waste repository in the US.
Polar ice shelf thinning speeds up
Eighteen years of satellite data reveal an acceleration in the thinning of many of Antarctica's floating ice shelves.
China's 'magic bunny' goes viral
China's endangered Ili Pika goes viral
Dark matter flits through collisions
A long-running study shows dark matter coasts unscathed through galactic collisions, betraying a ghostly lack of interaction with the known Universe.
River health revealed in 'shocking' figures
Just 17% of England's rivers are judged to be in good health, according to "shocking" Environment Agency figures.
Getting ready for the mission to Hell
Europe and America are building two satellites to study the Sun that will venture closer to the solar inferno than any previous missions.
Drones bounce back from collisions
Researchers in the US copy bird and bat wings to build a drone that can rebound and recover from mid-air collisions.
VIDEO: The drone wings that bounce back
Researchers in the US copy bird and bat wings to build a drone that can rebound and recover after mid-air collisions.
What are the Designs of the Year?
Weird and wonderful entries vie for Design of the Year
Water 'could warm a million homes'
A million properties across England could in future be heated by water from rivers, canals and the sea, the government says.
Swimmer has Russian Ross Sea talks
The record-breaking endurance swimmer Lewis Pugh discusses the possibility of an Antarctic Ross Sea marine reserve with the Russians.
Bloodhound car has engine fitting
The Bloodhound Super Sonic Car has a fitting with the Rolls-Royce jet engine it will use to try to break the world land speed record.
House sparrow rule roost in Scotland
House sparrows are the most commonly spotted bird in gardens in Scotland, according to an RSPB survey.
Badger TB vaccine expansion plans
A trial to give Bovine TB vaccines to badgers will expand after it was deemed a success by scientists in Cornwall.
Mars rover detects 'useful nitrogen'
The Curiosity rover makes a detection of nitrogen compounds which provide further evidence that ancient Mars would have been a habitable world.
Hopes grow for climate-proof beans
A breakthrough in the development of temperature-resilient beans could help sustain a vital source of protein for millions of people around the globe.
The myths about food and pregnancy
Pregnant women are often told what to eat and what to avoid but sound advice can get lost in a mix of badly-reported science and old wives' tales.
Why I consumed my own blood
Michael Mosley on why he snacked on his own blood
Where does my personality fit in?
Is your personality suited to the place you live? New research maps the personality of 380 locations in Great Britain.
Short circuit delays LHC restart
The restart of the Large Hadron Collider hits a delay, after a short circuit is detected in one of its powerful electromagnets.
Olive tree disease spreads in Italy
Italy must step up efforts to contain a bacterial disease blighting olive trees in the southern province of Lecce, EU officials warn.
Alien plants 'no threat' to UK flora
A study suggests that non-native plant species do not pose a risk to native flora, as widely assumed, because negative impacts are limited to localised areas.
VIDEO: Solar 'could provide 4% of UK electricity'
Solar power could provide up to 4% of the UK's electricity by the end of the decade, the government has said.
Big rise in solar energy use predicted
Solar energy could provide up to 4% of the UK's electricity by the end of the decade, the government forecasts.
'Monster salamanders' in mass grave
Scientists report a new species of giant amphibian after digging up multiple fossils from an ancient, dried-up lake where hundreds of the beasts probably died.
Australia finds 'huge asteroid impact'
Scientists in central Australia discover what they say is a 400km-wide underground asteroid crater - the largest impact area ever found.
Being comfortable in robotics' uncanny valley
The capability of the latest intelligent robots is forcing us to address how far we want these machines integrated into our lives.
VIDEO: How robotic hand uses bio-signals
David Shukman looks at work being done at the Edinburgh Centre for Robotics, as the government pushes for more investment and co-operation in the field.
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