Find out about the how the structure of the DNA was decoded and the special senses of some animals. As always, this edition is packed with knowledge. These are moments frozen for posterity that have come to define our past. My favourite and a must see is another photo essay, 10 Photographs That Made History, put together with inputs from historians across the globe. Don’t be fooled by the cute pink faces of the Japanese macaques, it takes much more than hot geysers to keep these primates thriving in extraordinarily extreme temperatures. This issue carries a few testaments of tough times, visual journeys into the worlds of nature and history when they have been at their demanding best. In this literary feast, we bring you the latest titles, characters we love to hate, and get your views on what’s worth readingīy taming the Yangtze River and pioneering irrigation, Yu the Great changed the course of human historyįrom the editor Take a trip to Hell Valley. We review the biggest title in competitive gaming, DOTA 2, and bring you nuggets of gaming news from across the industryĪ veritable buffet of brain teasers guaranteed to test your mindīrowse through a varied collection of some of the coolest gadgets on the market Saini, the principal of Delhi Public School, R.K. Unravelling the secrets of the building blocks of life, DNAħ8 Ye Olde Travel Guide: Reykjavik, 1828 Visit the beautiful Scandinavian city and bask in the beauty of 19th Century Iceland Outstanding photographs to inform and engage We examine the most spectacularįollow the footsteps of history’s most intrepid trailblazers as we chart out the voyages undertaken by mankind’s greatest explorers Nature has gifted animals with senses and abilities we’d normally associate with superheroes. Leading historians pick images, which captured their era to commemorate the 175th anniversary of the discovery of the Daguerreotype process The latest intelligence – the speed of light may not be as fast we think, and spiders with a taste for seafood Our panel of experts answer the questions you’ve always wanted to askĪ hundred years on, the advancements made during the First World War are in use today, though probably not in the way their makers intended Find out how Japanese macaques battle sub-zero temperatures p32ĪNDREW NEWEY, Geoffrey Malins and John McDowell, esa/Andy Potts, Anup Shah and Fiona Rogers, yann hubert/flpa, illustrator: gluekitĪnup Shah and Fiona Rodgers photograph Japanese Macaques in Japan’s foreboding Hell ValleyĮminent scientists from across the globe nominate their selection for history’s greatest mindįind out what the rendezvous of the Rosetta spacecraft with the comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko means for space explorationĭecoding the seemingly impossible laws of physics that govern the movie universe
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