LATEST HEADLINES
Stone Age humans crossed Sahara in the rain
20:00 09 November 2009 | 6 comments
Wet spells in the Sahara may have helped early humans migrate out of Africa
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
Head-mounted microscope sees brain beneath the skull
14:45 09 November 2009 | 15 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
Spy-in-the-cab could improve teenage driving
FEATURE: 12:00 08 November 2009 | 31 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
Evidence recovered from dirty DNA samples
IN BRIEF: 11:00 08 November 2009 | 6 comments
Contaminated DNA that would normally be written off can now provide evidence, thanks to amplification enzymes that tolerate pollution
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
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
Al Gore's convenient solutions
18:25 09 November 2009 - updated 19:05 09 November 2009
Al Gore discusses his latest book, Our Choice, which looks at the technologies that will solve global warming and the political obstacles that stand in their way.











