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Sci&Tech Editor Georgia Brooks explains the exciting new interdisciplinary theory, and its potential to unite discourses and explain unsolved scientific problems.
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Sci&Tech Writer Yankie Chow explores the breakfast myth, concluding that whether or not to eat breakfast could really just be a personal choice
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Gaming Editor Louis Wright explores the role that the climate and policy around this could play in the rapidly approaching UK General Election.
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Digital Editor Halima Ahad investigates the effects of consuming caffeine as part of a series exploring daily stresses on the brain
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Sci&Tech Writer Amy Frith celebrates this sustainable milestone for the UK, while warning not to disregard its limitations
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Digital Editor Weronika Bialek explores the potential for green cities to revolutionise our daily lives, despite the challenges to implement these changes.
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Sci&Tech Writer Zenna Hussain reports on the return of Brazilian fossils from Germany to their homeland in Brazil, and what this could mean for palaeontological colonialism.
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Digital Editor Weronika Bialek explores the potential of gene-edited fruits and vegetables in the fight for healthier diets
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Sci&Tech Writer Taylor Fulton-Ward reports on new studies suggesting that humans need more sleep in winter.
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Sci&Tech Writer Jacob Dawson argues that despite claims of "levelling up" the North, HS2 remains emblematic of a "Southern centric doctrine"
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In the first of a new series for Sci&Tech, our writer Benjamin Oakden looks at the science behind the myth that carrots can give you night vision
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Gaming Editor Louis Wright condemns the Government for the "absolutely indefensible" decision to approve the West Cumbria Mining Project