2 | New Scientist | 20 November 2021
Elsewhere
on New Scientist
AB
PH
OT
OG
RA
PH
IE/S
HU
TT
ER
ST
OC
K
Newsletter
Podcast Here, boy! Why did we domesticate animals like dogs so recently?
Newsletter
Academy
The quantum
world, explained
Quantum theory is one of the
triumphs of science, but it has
a reputation for being mystifying.
Take this introductory course
and you will learn the basics of
the theory, the history of how
physicists devised it and how we
have come to terms with the fact
that reality is underpinned by
a sea of nebulous probabilities.
Enroll online now.
academy.newscientist.com
Online
Covid-19 daily update
Stay on top of the latest and
most crucial developments in
the pandemic with our briefing,
updated at 12pm GMT every
weekday. We include links to
our exclusive news, features
and interviews.
newscientist.com/
coronavirus-latest
COP26 special
The New Scientist reporting
team in Glasgow, UK, reflect on
their experiences of the crucial
COP26 climate summit and
the pledges nations have made.
They also discuss high-income
countries’ attempts to make
up for breaking their 2015
promise to pay $100 billion
to help lower-income nations
tackle climate change. We also
hear from special guests
including climate scientist Emily
Shuckburgh and former UN
diplomat Christiana Figueres.
newscientist.com/nspod
Our Human Story
Get Michael Marshall’s
newsletter delivered free
to your inbox each month.
The latest instalment looks
at how humans domesticated
animals and plants. One of the
biggest questions is why many
examples of this seem to have
happened so late in humanity’s
300,000-year history.
newscientist.com/
our-human-story
Video
Vanessa Nakate
Watch a clip of climate activist
Vanessa Nakate speaking at
COP26 in Glasgow, UK. “The
atmosphere doesn’t care about
commitments, it only cares about
what we put into it or stop putting
into it,” she says. Don’t forget to
subscribe to our channel for
more discoveries and explainers,
including extra coverage from
the climate summit.
youtube.com/newscientist
DO
MI
NIK
A^ Z
AR
ZY
CK
A/N
UR
PH
OT
O/S
HU
TT
E^ R
ST
OC
K
Keep 1.5°C alive Climate protesters gathered in Glasgow, UK, last week
Podcast
Binders
Want to save and protect your old
copies of New Scientist in style?
Our binders are the perfect tool
for the job. Each one holds
13 magazines using specially
designed cords. Check out our
special offer online and get four
binders for the price of three.
shop.newscientist.com
“ Humans
have
domesticated
dozens of
species of
animals
and plants”
Newsletter