Skip to navigation | Skip to content

In Depth

RSS (Latest Science Features web feed)Science Features

Sleep plays an active part in turning around the experiences we have in the day.

The meaning of dreamsArticle has audio

Monday, 16 August 2010

We may not always remember them, but dreams may play a very important role in laying down memories and learning new tasks. 3 comments

A loader prepares to shovel iron ore dug from an Australian mine.Iron ore country

Wednesday, 14 July 2010Article has audioArticle has photo slideshow

61 comments

Explore more Science Features »

RSS (Latest Nature Features web feed)Nature Features

The channel-billed cuckoo is the world's largest parasitic bird.

Channel-bills go cuckoo in spring

Wednesday, 1 September 2010
You know it's spring when you're woken in the early hours of the morning by the deafening calls of channel-billed cuckoos looking for love. 7 comments

RSS (Latest Opinion web feed)Opinion

Supersymmetry: computer models predict the Higgs-boson particle will decay into two jets of hadrons. The question is: does the Higgs-boson particle even exist?

String theory ties us in knots

Tuesday, 31 August 2010
It's time to stop searching for a grand plan that explains the Universe and accept that Nature is imperfect, argues Professor Marcelo Gleiser. 30 comments

RSS (Latest Analysis web feed)Analysis

ham

'Healthy bacon' patents raise questions

Thursday, 19 August 2010
Patent applications covering the enhancement of meat, including pork, with omega-3 fatty acids are stimulating debate over the ethics and legalities of claiming intellectual property over food.


Explore more Science Features

Never looked good in a lab coat? There are other ways to take part in real scientific research, we promise.Putting the citizen into science

Thursday, 15 April 2010 3 commentsArticle has audioArticle has photo slideshow
Not a scientist? Don't even have a science degree? Not a problem, scientists need your help.

Gene Wars: the race to own our foodGene Wars: the race to own our food

Wednesday, 14 April 2010
This special report by the ABC News Online Investigative Unit and ABC Lateline program looks into the future of food production here in Australia and around the world. They discuss the major players in agriculture and science, experts in intellectual property and farmers.

What will the next 10 years hold for science?Future science: the next 10 years

Thursday, 11 March 2010 22 commentsArticle has photo slideshow
New worlds, new life, new bodies: just some of the breakthroughs we may see by 2020, predict our panel of leading Australian scientists.

Obesity interferes with our brain's ability to detect our levels of stored fatIs your brain making you fat?

Thursday, 21 January 2010 33 commentsArticle has audio
We're getting fatter, but it's not all our fault, says physiologist Professor Michael Cowley.

A telescopic view of Orion's belt shows it is more than just three stars.Summer sky tour

Wednesday, 6 January 2010Article has audioArticle has photo slideshow
The summer sky is dominated by Orion in the north. Learn about the hunter and other constellations on our guided tour with astronomer Fred Watson.

Tag me: Freed from the constraints of film the photographer no longer needs to be always behind the camera Smile please: the evolution of the digital camera

Thursday, 17 December 2009 2 commentsArticle has audioArticle has photo slideshow
Digital innovations have made many marks on history, but in recent times few have been as dramatic as the evolution in the way we capture, store and share images.

Injecting massive amounts of sulfur into the stratosphere would cool the planet but also bleach the skyEngineering a cooler climate

Thursday, 3 December 2009 42 commentsArticle has audioArticle has photo slideshow
With CO2 emissions still rising, climate scientists are looking seriously at cooling the planet using geoengineering technologies. Is it time for a climate change plan B?

A noisier ocean could have a profound effect on the humpback whale's annual migration Oceans face acid test

Wednesday, 11 November 2009 27 commentsArticle has videoArticle has photo slideshow
Ocean acidification is dramatically changing the chemistry of our oceans and affecting sea creatures like the humpback whale. Is it too late to turn the problem around?

Man and fire: a firefighter control burns forest in north-east Victoria.High fire danger

Thursday, 29 October 2009 3 commentsArticle has videoArticle has photo slideshow
Predictions that fire will become more frequent and intense may change everything we know, and love, about the Australian bush.

Epigenetics is the science that describes all modifications to genes other than changes to the DNA sequence itselfHow epigenetics is changing our fight with disease

Thursday, 1 October 2009 7 commentsArticle has audioArticle has photo slideshow
Sequencing the human genome was supposed to answer our questions about the genetic origins of disease but the burgeoning science of epigenetics is telling us it's a whole lot more complicated.

Stromatolites, like these in Western Australia, provide evidence of early life on EarthWhen did life begin?

Thursday, 17 September 2009 39 commentsArticle has photo slideshow
Biological curves were used to date the earliest forms of life. But could the discovery of how to make curved inorganic materials in the laboratory throw our understanding of life on Earth?

Will we soon be able to replace any body part - including our eyes - at will?Spare parts

Monday, 31 August 2009 4 commentsArticle has audioArticle has photo slideshow
A bionic eye, a new heart grown in the lab, spinal implants that will help quadriplegics walk again... Will we soon be able to replace any body part at will?

Parliament House in Canberra lights up the night sky.Let there be night

Monday, 17 August 2009 7 commentsArticle has photo slideshow
Light pollution is a problem for star gazers all across Australia. So what can we do to preserve our night sky heritage?

A long exposure photograph shows the trails of stars circling the South Celestial Pole.How the sky works

Tuesday, 11 August 2009 10 commentsArticle has photo slideshow
Finding constellations and planets in the ever-moving night sky can be challenging. But with these tips, a few handy diagrams and your imagination, it's easier than you think!

The Emu in the Sky stretches across the Milky Way.Australia's first astronomers

Monday, 27 July 2009 34 commentsArticle has audioArticle has photo slideshow
Astronomy didn't start with the Greeks. Thousands of years earlier Aboriginal people scanned the night sky, using its secrets to survive the Australian landscape.

Plague Locust threat

ABC Rural brings you specialist coverage of the locust plague threat facing south-eastern Australia

Video features from Catalyst

Catalyst 02/09/2010

Mysteries of the Emperors

Mysteries of the Emperors

Catalyst 02/09/2010

Fundamentals with Bernie Hobbs: The Einstein diet

Fundamentals with Bernie Hobbs: The Einstein diet

Catalyst 02/09/2010

Indoor air

Indoor air

Catalyst 02/09/2010

In Defence of the Flying Fox

In Defence of the Flying Fox

More Video

Audio Features from ABC Radio National

Background Briefing

The flash crash

Click to play this audio

Science Show

David Attenborough – Collecting

Click to play this audio

Science Show

Keeping accurate time

Click to play this audio

More Audio

Big Aussie Start Hunt

Where's the best place in Australia to see the stars? Check our results map to see how your local area rates

Crude - the incredible story of oil

We depend upon oil, yet few of us know what it is. Watch this award-winning documentary to discover how oil is shaping our Earth's future.