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Cinderella fruit: Wild delicacies become cash crops

FEATURE:  10:54 10 November 2009  | 1 comment

From chocolate berries to monkey oranges and gingerbread plums, Africa is the home of thousands of tasty fruits whose potential is ripe for the plucking

Stone Age humans crossed Sahara in the rain

20:00 09 November 2009  | 11 comments

Wet spells in the Sahara may have helped early humans migrate out of Africa

Super-efficient cars racing to win the X prize

Race for the prize (Image: Aptera)

18:28 09 November 2009  | 20 comments

With $10 million prize money at stake, the race to build energy-thrifty cars that appeal to the mass market is hotting up

Today on New Scientist: 9 November 2009

18:00 09 November 2009

Today's stories on newscientist.com, at a glance, including: the quest to explore the solar system's oceans, a plan to drill into a monster urban volcano, and where you can listen to an Arabesque for flatworms

Plan to pierce heart of urban monster volcano

THIS WEEK:  16:05 09 November 2009  | 28 comments

Next month, geologists will begin to drill into a huge volcano in Italy that has towns on top of it: is that a good idea?

Head-mounted microscope sees brain beneath the skull Movie Camera

14:45 09 November 2009  | 17 comments

A microscope fitted to rats' heads watched the animals' brains in action as they roved freely

Breath of fresh air transforms stem cells

14:32 09 November 2009  | 4 comments

Specialised lung tissue has been created by exposing stem cells to the open air

Stop selling out science to commerce

COMMENT AND ANALYSIS:  14:08 09 November 2009  | 54 comments

Corporate might and commercial pressures are undermining research. It's time for scientists to blow the whistle, say Stuart Parkinson and Chris Langley

Gizmos allow artists to 'feel' their creations

FEATURE:  11:57 09 November 2009  | 5 comments

Artists are leaving keyboards and mice behind to work more intuitively with touch screens, input devices with physical feedback and air-drawing

Extraterrestrial rafting: Hunting off-world sea life

FEATURE:  10:46 09 November 2009  | 25 comments

Do the moons of Jupiter and Saturn harbour life in their chilly oceans? A flotilla of space probes is being lined up to haul anchor and find out

Spy-in-the-cab could improve teenage driving

FEATURE:  12:00 08 November 2009  | 32 comments

Novice drivers are responsible for a disproportionate number of accidents – now an in-car warning system has cut incidents of reckless driving by half

FAVOURITE COMMENT

Murderer with 'aggression genes' gets sentence cut

"Isn't there a thing called 'equality before the law'? Judgment should be according to what he did, not what he may have a higher probability to do." bartleby

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

Pluto: I'm a planet, damn it!

10:00 10 November 2009

Pluto finally speaks out on the planet controversy

The murk and the magic

21:18 09 November 2009 - updated 22:07 09 November 2009

A bold new play shows a darker side of Isaac Newton, who spent much of his time navigating the muddled mazes of theology

THE HUMAN BRAIN

Clever fools: Why a high IQ doesn't mean you're smart

There's more to intelligence than just IQ. (Image: David C Ellis/Getty)

IQ measures the brightness of our mental searchlight. But where we point it also matters

TECHNOLOGY

How your brain sees virtual you

How do you view yourself? (Image: Blizzard Entertainment)

The way the brain regards the virtual "you" may help explain why some people spend large chunks of their life online playing immersive games

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VIDEO

Game controller tracks motion and emotion

Sony looks set to be the first major console maker to bring hands-free, full-body game control to the public

IN THE NEWS

Artificial penis allows rabbits to mate normally

Now rabbits can keep on going (Image: Sipa Press/Rex Features)

Lab-grown penile structures implanted into patients may one day help treat men with severe erectile dysfunction

GALLERY
Building blocks of digital graphics (Image: Lee et al / ACM Siggraph)

Triple shadows and fake reflections: Future graphics

See computer graphics research to be presented at the ACM Siggraph Asia conference next month – including an art installation that casts three distinct shadows

SPECIAL REPORT

Swine flu: The pandemic of 2009

Keep up to date with the latest on the H1N1 flu pandemic with our special report

HEALTH
Should have spent more time outdoors? (Image: Veer Solus/Getty)

Generation specs: Stopping the short-sight epidemic

Myopia is on the rise all around the world, but there might be a simple way to spare many kids the need for spectacles

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