2 | New Scientist | 5 February 2022
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Light fantastic The Pacific footballfish can illuminate the deep sea
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True crime, forensics
and psychopaths
Join psychopath expert Mark
Freestone, who helped shape
the character of Villanelle for TV
show Killing Eve, and forensic
chemist Niamh Nic Daeid,
who has advised crime writer
Val McDermid, for a darkly
compelling evening of crime
science. This event is at London’s
Conway Hall on 16 March. Doors
open at 6.30pm GMT.
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Kenya, the cradle
of humanity
Explore the origins of our species
and see incredible wildlife on this
unique holiday to Kenya. Hosted
by palaeontologist Louise
Leakey, you will visit important
archaeological sites and get
a private tour of the Nairobi
National Museum. This is a
10-day trip starting on 1 June.
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Weekly
The team explains how
covid-19 can cause neurological
conditions, from strokes to
muscle weakness and brain
fog. Plus, we are living through
a geological epoch called the
Anthropocene, but when might
the name be made official?
What’s more, your host Rowan
Hooper returns from Norway
with a story about melting
glaciers in the Arctic.
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Wild Wild Life
Get Penny Sarchet’s newsletter
about the wonders of animals
and plants delivered free to your
inbox. This month, she gives
some tips on how to understand
the world of plants and marvels
at the Pacific footballfish, which
lives in the deep sea and can
light up its surroundings in
two different ways.
newscientist.com/
wild-wild-life
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How to clean up a river
Sewage, agricultural waste and
plastic are polluting waterways
and reducing fish and insect
numbers. In our latest video
report, we visit the Evenlode
river in southern England where
a utility company, local farmers and
volunteers are using simple tricks
to boost the water quality (see
also p23). For more videos, don’t
forget to subscribe to our channel.
youtube.com/newscientist
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Going, going... How quickly are Svalbard’s glaciers melting?
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Essential guide
How did the universe begin?
What is it made of? Do black holes
exist? Albert Einstein’s space- and
time-warping theories of relativity
have revolutionised our view of the
cosmos over the past century. Find
out how in the 10th New Scientist
Essential Guide, available now.
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“ This fish can
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that has
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