Weight is not an issue: How a 250kg kangaroo could still hop on two legs |

For decades, scientists have debated a simple question with a surprisingly complicated answer: could Australia’s extinct giant kangaroos actually hop like the ones alive today? Modern kangaroos are built for efficient movement, using powerful hind legs and spring-like tendons to travel long distances. But when ancient species grew to enormous sizes, some weighing up to…

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The ocean floor is turning into the world’s biggest plastic dump site killing hundreds of underwater species |

For years, the public face of ocean pollution has been the same: floating bottles, drifting bags, and beaches littered with waste. But scientists say the most dangerous build-up is happening far below the surface, on the seafloor, where debris settles and remains for decades. A global scientific review led by Professor Miquel Canals at the…

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Something unusual is happening in the Pacific and it may affect weather worldwide |

Something unusual is happening in the Pacific and it may affect weather worldwide Changes are unfolding across the central Pacific Ocean, though they are not obvious at first glance. Winds are behaving less predictably, surface temperatures are drifting, and pressure patterns are starting to lose their usual shape. Data from Severe Weather Europe suggest the…

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Sunita Williams describes seeing India from space as “connected nerves” on Raj Shamani’s podcast | Watch |

When astronauts describe Earth, they rarely speak in terms of countries or borders. From orbit, the planet appears as a living, interconnected system where patterns of light, colour, and movement replace political lines on a map. This idea came through clearly when Indian-origin astronaut Sunita Williams appeared on Raj Shamani’s podcast and reflected on her…

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