2 | New Scientist | 16 April 2022
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Video
Pachyderm protection See how camera traps are saving elephants
Event
Why we love
Love is an awe-inspiring and
complex phenomenon. In this
talk, evolutionary anthropologist
Anna Machin will take you
through a rollercoaster ride of
the why, how, who and what
of love. She will explain how love
evolved as a form of biological
bribery, why it is the greatest
factor in our health and longevity
and the reasons it sits at the
centre of what it is to be human.
Online at 6pm BST on 5 May
and later on demand.
newscientist.com/events
Discovery tour
Ancient caves, human
origins: Northern Spain
Step back in time to discover how
our ancestors lived, played and
worked. See one of the oldest
known cave paintings at El
Castillo, Spain, and experience
the wonders of Palaeolithic cave
art by torchlight, accompanied by
New Scientist writers and local
archaeological experts. Plus, hear
specialist talks and receive tuition
in the art of wine tasting. Various
dates, seven days for £2649.
newscientist.com/tours
Podcasts
Weekly
The team tackle the latest
warning that time is running
out to keep global warming to
below 1.5°C, including what
role litigation could play. They
also discuss claims that a new
measurement of the W boson
could rewrite particle physics,
and the extraordinary genitalia
of female wētā crickets.
newscientist.com/nspod
Newsletter
Lost in Space-Time
Executive editor Richard Webb
explains the transformative
power of gravitational waves
and their potential for giving
us new insights into the lives
and deaths of stars, as well
as the formation and evolution
of galaxies. Plus, he grapples
with a mind-bending question:
Are quantum states real?
newscientist.com/
lost-in-space-time
Video
Caught on camera
AI-powered camera traps have
given wildlife rangers in Gabon
a new tool to fight poaching and
biodiversity loss. The country is
a biodiversity hotspot, hosting
one of the largest populations
of the endangered African forest
elephant. Now, researchers
are using the camera traps
to help monitor and protect
this and other species.
youtube.com/newscientist
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Intimate detail Discover what science has to say about love
Event
Essential guide
More than 3 billion years in the
making, the latest New Scientist
Essential Guide is a sweeping
survey of the history of life on our
planet, the wonders of biodiversity
today – and the unique threats
it faces from human activity.
shop.newscientist.com
“ We might
have already
seen the
gravitational
wave
background”
Newsletter