LATEST HEADLINES
The Peeriodic Table of Illusions
ESSAY: 16:45 12 November 2009
Illusions can tell us much about how our brains work, but first we need to know how each one works, says Richard L. Gregory
Less loud sounds can still damage ears
THIS WEEK: 22:00 11 November 2009 | 14 comments
If the results in mice translate to humans, the laws that determine the noises workers can be exposed to may need to change
Today on New Scientist: 11 November 2009
18:00 11 November 2009
Today's stories on newscientist.com, at a glance, including: what the LHC is really looking for, how a mini ice age took hold of Europe in months, and how to get a club-winged manakin excited
FAVOURITE COMMENT
Giant crack in Earth's crust
"You're a real crack-up." lame_guy (continues)
FEEDBACK
Why it's good to log out
How to harness malingering electrons, a quantum bifurcating footpath, and the importance of seeking medical attention if you snuff it
CULTURELAB
2012 movie is truly disastrous
11:00 12 November 2009 - updated 11:29 12 November 2009
Blockbuster film 2012 takes creative licence with reality...and with science.
Masters of disguise
09:00 12 November 2009 - updated 11:30 12 November 2009
In Dazzled and Deceived, Peter Forbes highlights some of the most successful, and surprising, attempts at concealment













