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The Week Junior - Science + Nature
The Week Junior - Science + Nature

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The Week Junior - Science + Nature, 22 Mai 2026

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In dieser Ausgabe

ArticleInto the deep

ou might think that our whole planet has been explored; that every plant and animal has been dis­covered and cata­logued; that there’s not much mys­tery wait­ing to be brought into the light; but you’d be wrong. There is a place that’s hardly been...

Into the deep

ArticleTO THE MOON AND BACK

In April, four explorers climbed on board an Orion space­craft (nick­named Integ­rity) and blas­ted o from Earth. Amer­ican astro­nauts Vic­tor Glover, Christina Koch and Reid Wise­man, along with Cana­dian astro­naut Jeremy Hansen, were head­ing into...

TO THE MOON AND BACK

ArticleRobot ath­lete breaks run­ning world record

Humanoids battled each other – and humans – in a half-mara­thon race in Beijing, China, last month. Humanoids are robots whose bod­ies look like people. The fast­est machine – a red racer called Light­ning, made by Chinese smart­phone maker Honor –...

Robot ath­lete breaks run­ning world record

ArticleWILD

Huge eyes to spot din­ner in the dark

WILD

ArticleWEIRD

Flash­ing lights to defend against pred­at­ors

WEIRD

ArticleWACKY

Bod­ies built to beat crush­ing pres­sure

WACKY

ArticleCLUE:

This nat­ural beauty is fam­ous for being a little bit prickly.

CLUE:

ArticleEDITOR’S LETTER

Take a huge sniff… can you smell that? There’s a def­in­ite salty whiff of the sea in this issue of Sci­ence+nature. A fam­ous writer called Arthur C. Clarke once said that our planet shouldn’t be called Earth at all – it should be called Ocean. As...

EDITOR’S LETTER

ArticleInto the deep

Jour­ney to the deep­est depths of the ocean to dis­cover the weird and won­der­ful creatures lurk­ing in the dark­ness.

Into the deep