The Mount Maunganui tragedy reminds us landslides are NZ’s deadliest natural hazard
Tragic slips in the Bay of Plenty highlight how geology, heavy rainfall and climate change are combining to amplify a largely hidden risk.
Latest technology news
Tragic slips in the Bay of Plenty highlight how geology, heavy rainfall and climate change are combining to amplify a largely hidden risk.
The queen was the source of much debate among 18th-century thinkers.
A bit of understanding – plus effort to regulate yourself and give compassionate feedback – can shift a stuck relationship into something more bearable, perhaps even meaningful.
New research could allow health care providers to identify and treat patients at risk for rheumatoid arthritis before the disease progresses.
Philosophers from Aristotle to Nietzsche have debated whether being virtuous only helps others, or if it benefits the virtuous person, too.
With solo living on the rise, more consumers are dining, traveling and spending on their own. Yet most brands still design their offerings year-round for couples.
London’s fog literally fogged photographs with the yellowish hue of the capital’s notorious ‘pea-soupers’.
While many cultural leaders have applauded the move, others are more critical.
The decision to bring a dog into the family should recognize that, like other family members, they will require medical care.
Since the republic’s beginning, it has been uncontested law that to invade someone’s home, the government needs a warrant reviewed and signed by a judicial officer. ICE is turning that law on its head...
Foreign policy under Keir Starmer underlines the historical limits of idealism in the British approach to matters abroad.
Many workers in Scotland – not just its top earners – are going to be paying more tax soon.
This ridiculous but heartbreaking football bust-up nearly tore Ireland apart.
A study links plant-based diets to lower odds of reaching 100 – but the result depends on age, weight and how plant-based diets are followed.
In one of England’s most deprived cities with one of the most ambitious climate targets, research shows the huge influence that emotion has on sustainability goals.
In Soho, London, 100 years ago, John Logie Baird’s mechanical television system broadcast recognisable human faces for the first time.
Copper peptides signal the body to build collagen and clear out damaged cells.
Postbiotic supplements may sound appealing, but science has not yet caught up with marketing.
Iran’s young population is educated and connected to the world: even state violence cannot deny their freedom in the long run.
There’s a pressing need to understand and respond to what’s known as “space weather”.