Getting around by common design: You can’t pedal a deck chair, but its design is based on the tried and tested shape of the bicycle. Or so says the curator of London’s latest transport museum Features
Do people make deserts?: The drylands of the Earth have bloomed under humid climates in the past. Perhaps the desert dwellers have lessons for us about utilising drylands and adapting to a hostile climate Features
The junkyard in the sky: Space is full of rubbish. From tiny flecks of paint to the broken remains of old satellites and rockets, the debris orbiting the Earth could mean the end of spaceflight within decades Features
New directions for science on TV: Three out of Britain’s five regular television programmes about science have new editors. Their programmes are watched by about 15 million people. What are their views on TV’s contribution to the public understanding of Features
New life for old forest: As loggers and environmentalists battle over North America’s ancient forests, a new philosophy is emerging. Canadian scientists are rewriting the ecological rules, with far-reaching consequences for the forestry of the future Features
Getting around by common design: You can’t pedal a deck chair, but its design is based on the tried and tested shape of the bicycle. Or so says the curator of London’s latest transport museum Features
Do people make deserts?: The drylands of the Earth have bloomed under humid climates in the past. Perhaps the desert dwellers have lessons for us about utilising drylands and adapting to a hostile climate Features
The junkyard in the sky: Space is full of rubbish. From tiny flecks of paint to the broken remains of old satellites and rockets, the debris orbiting the Earth could mean the end of spaceflight within decades Features
New directions for science on TV: Three out of Britain’s five regular television programmes about science have new editors. Their programmes are watched by about 15 million people. What are their views on TV’s contribution to the public understanding of Features
New life for old forest: As loggers and environmentalists battle over North America’s ancient forests, a new philosophy is emerging. Canadian scientists are rewriting the ecological rules, with far-reaching consequences for the forestry of the future Features
Forum: Sad story of Shetland’s seabirds / A challenge to the government to face up to the seabird disaster