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    2. Alice Lipscombe-Southwell
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    Alice Lipscombe-Southwell

    Managing editor, BBC Science Focus

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    Alice Lipscombe-Southwell is the managing editor at BBC Science Focus Magazine. She has a BSc in zoology with marine zoology. Her interests include natural history, wildlife, the outdoors, health and fitness.

    Recent articles by Alice Lipscombe-Southwell

    Birds and reptiles cry tears just like our own © Arianne P. Oriá
    Science news

    Birds and reptiles cry tears just like our own

    Dogs trained to sniff out patients with COVID-19 (Coronavirus sniffing Labrador Frida © Kerstin Thellmann
    Science news

    Dogs trained to sniff out patients with COVID-19

    Ultra-black deep-sea fish have skin that can absorb 99.9 per cent of light © Karen Osborn, Smithsonian
    Science news

    Ultra-black deep-sea fish have skin that can absorb 99.9 per cent of light

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    Wasp ‘bodyguards’ could be used as biological pesticide © Getty Images
    Science news

    Wasp ‘bodyguards’ could be used as biological pesticide

    China's manned submersible Shenhai Yongshi (or Deep-sea Warrior) © Sun Qing/Getty Images
    Science news

    Toxic mercury pollution found in the ocean’s deepest point

    A flexible diet is the key for fish adapting to life out of the water © Terry Ord
    Science news

    A flexible diet is the key for fish adapting to life out of the water

    This image shows a whole-heart view of the 3D reconstructed male rat heart, showing the extent and distribution of the intrinsic cardiac neurons © Achanta et al. - iScience
    Nature

    Virtual 3D recreation of the heart reveals nerve cells network

    Ancient human regularly climbed through the trees (GIF showing the double pillar of spongy bone in the head of the femur of the fossil StW 311 © Christopher Dunmore)
    Science news

    Ancient human regularly climbed through the trees

    Ocean plastics smell like food to turtles © Getty Images
    Science news

    Ocean plastics smell like food to turtles

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    © G Hüdepohl/ESO
    Space

    Eye on the sky The ground-based telescopes bringing the Universe down to Earth

    Does science have a problem with women?
    Everyday science

    Why aren’t there more women in science?

    Cuttlefish skimp on lunch when there’s shrimp for dinner © Pauline Billard
    Science news

    Cuttlefish skimp on lunch when there’s shrimp for dinner

    Female chimps more likely to stay at home if they have a powerful mum © Emily Wroblewski
    Science news

    Female chimps more likely to stay at home if they have a powerful mum

    Stimulated Raman histologic images of diffuse astrocytoma (left) and meningioma (right) © Daniel Orringer, NYU Langone Health
    Science news

    AI trained to spot brain tumours faster than humans

    Jim Al-Khalili: Why should we care about science and scientists? © Getty Images
    Everyday science

    Jim Al-Khalili Why should we care about science and scientists?

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