Thermals in science

Using stem cells to grow organs for transplantation. Illustration: shutterstock

The stem cell revolution turned out to be a fraud

mysterious rays. Illustration: shutterstock

N rays or no rays

Ethics in science. Illustration: shutterstock

Reflections - the researcher's commitment to the ethics of science / Bracha Reger

Intricate geometric shapes in a corn field. From Wikipedia

Crop circles - hoax, environmental art or intelligent messages?

René Blondet "discovers" the N-rays. From Wikipedia

The elusive N-rays

The man from Piltdown - one of the most famous forgeries in science of the beginning of the 20th century

When scientists sin

Smoke billows over the Twin Towers on September 11, 2001. Photo: US National Park Service. From Wikipedia

The paranoia runs deep

Cosmic scene with DNA, stars, solvents and atomic circles in oral flow.

The Fake Moonstone of the Void-Museum

Cosmic scene with DNA, stars, solvents and atomic circles in oral flow.

DNA is easier to forge than money

Cosmic scene with DNA, stars, solvents and atomic circles in oral flow.

Vaccines, autism and scientific quackery

A crystal skull from Mexico in the British Museum. Photo: shutterstock

Are the famous crystal skulls fake?

An international team of researchers who analyzed two crystal skulls with advanced scientific tools concluded that they were not created in ancient Mexico
Cosmic scene with DNA, stars, solvents and atomic circles in oral flow.

Forgery, mistake, reproduction

Cosmic scene with DNA, stars, solvents and atomic circles in oral flow.

Will stem cell research recover from the Woo Suk Huang affair?

Cosmic scene with DNA, stars, solvents and atomic circles in oral flow.

The Bigfoot Mystery

Cosmic scene with DNA, stars, solvents and atomic circles in oral flow.

How the British stole Neptune from the French

Cosmic scene with DNA, stars, solvents and atomic circles in oral flow.

Dodgy science

Cosmic scene with DNA, stars, solvents and atomic circles in oral flow.

Dinosaur Bluff