20 February 2021 | New Scientist | 1
On the
cover
Coronavirus
8 What variants mean
for a return to normality
11 England’s flawed
quarantine plan
10 Did the virus come
from frozen foods?
12 Martian invasion
The new race to the Red Planet
News
Views
Features
14 What makes ice slippery?
Physicists finally get a foothold
on the problem
16 Stonehenge origins
The iconic monument may
have started as a stone circle in
Wales, 280 kilometres away
17 Ancient brains
Mini brains genetically altered
to be Neanderthal-like
23 Comment
Insects will help us create AI,
says James Marshall
24 The columnist
Annalee Newitz on using tech
to explore ancient cities
26 Letters
On the debate about baby
formula milk at food banks
28 Aperture
Royal Photographic Society’s
science competition
30 Culture
Bill Gates’s fine primer on
avoiding climate disaster
51 Stargazing at home
An easy way to locate the planets
or where an eclipse will happen
52 Puzzles
Try our crossword, quick quiz
and logic puzzle
54 Almost the last word
Why do dogs shake themselves
dry next to humans?
55 Tom Gauld for New Scientist
A cartoonist’s take on the world
56 Feedback
Unusual units and overtly sexual
cows: the week in weird
34 A rescue plan for nature
A prescription for saving our
ecosystems before it’s too late –
and ourselves along with them
42 Back from the brink
Lessons from the species we
have saved from extinction
46 How old are you really?
If you want to know how well
your body is ageing, you may
be in for a surprise
The back pages
13 Sky crane NASA’s Perseverance rover set to land on Mars
Vol 249 No 3322
Cover image: Egal/iStock
34 A rescue plan for nature
It’s not too late to save the
planet. Here’s how
NA
SA
/JP
L-C
AL
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CH
News
20 Vampire bat adoption
17 Cannibal cockroaches
30 Bill Gates on climate change
46 How old are you really?
This week’s issue
42 Features
“ We have the
tools to stem
biodiversity
loss – we need
the will”