Quite a lot of pie.
EPA-EFE/Neil Hall
Brexit campaigner Arron Banks faces a criminal inquiry for £8m of funds he donated to the Leave campaign.
National Library of Ireland
The events of the war caused Irish nationalists to push harder for their independence.
The delegations signing the Treaty of Versailles in the Hall of Mirrors.
Helen Johns Kirtland (1890-1979) and Lucian Swift Kirtland (died 1965), US National Archives
The Treaty of Versailles is often named as the main cause of World War II. But this is an overly simple explanation.
#winning? Not exactly.
EPA Images
The Democrats took the House of Representatives, but uncertainty remains and Trump is still standing. All eyes are now on Robert Mueller.
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How a price-hiking “meat tax” could prevent 220,000 deaths and save more than US$40 billion in health care costs around the world every year.
Reconstructive surgery carried out between 1916 and 1918.
Wellcome Images
Medical advances were the only positive things to come out of the Great War.
Serban Bogdan / shutterstock
A new law means the Shetland Isles must now be placed in their true location – but mapping experts aren’t entirely convinced.
A raid on a suspected organised criminal network in south London.
Dominic Lipinski/PA Wire
The Home Office’s new strategy to tackle organised crime is more reactive than proactive.
The new face of the £50 note?
National Portrait Gallery
Dorothy Hodgkin’s work on X-ray crystallography made it possible to understand how penicillin, insulin and many other molecules work.
wavebreakmedia/Shutterstock
Researchers have developed a new profile system that can save time and money and drastically improve patient care.
One theory is that the drug is named after the scaly green skin it can cause among those who use it.
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A chemist explains what it is, how it’s made – and its devastating consequences.
Sangalaki Island, Indonesia.
The Coral Reef Image Bank image provide by Simon Pierce.
Coral reefs are in trouble, but other marine species are also feeling the strain but are off the conservation radar.
jonathan kho/unsplash
Open gates, good food and communal living make for a very different approach to incarceration.
Feeling secure?
Tania Kolinko/Shutterstock
Knowing what your attachment style is can help you navigate life’s ups and downs a bit better.
Shutterstock
As billions more devices connect to the cloud, congestion will cause communication to become slower and less responsive.
Jamal Khashoggi: worrying times for dissidents everywhere.
EPA Images
Khashoggi’s ruthless killing is just one example of a broader trend including the widespread detention, kidnapping, murder and extradition of dissidents and their relatives.
TY Lim/Shutterstock
Is tonsillectomy modern-day bloodletting?
Banks needs to account for Brexit spending.
PA/Stefan Rousseau
What case law tells us about the validity of votes when things weren’t all they seemed.
Glenn R. Specht-grs photo/Shutterstock
Experiments into the effectiveness of conservation can help us learn what works best.
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Eating meat damages the environment and has been linked with higher risk of disease, but you don’t have to go vegan to make a difference to your health and the planet.
Image courtesy of IWM
It’s beautiful, clever and moving. But Peter Jackson’s use of colour and added sound essentially fictionalises this account of life in the trenches.
Diego G Diaz / Shutterstock.com
The success of the women’s movement shows the importance of international solidarity.
Stas Knop/Shutterstock
Stressful events can permanently damage your heart and increase your risk of death. Scientists have been discovering more about it.
Benedix/Shutterstock
The Bank of England wants a scientist for the new £50 note.
shutterstock
Genetic research on human behaviour has long been linked with eugenics and continues to attract interest from far-right groups.