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Cosmic bombardment may have opened Earth's crust for prebiotic chemistry
Cosmic bombardment may have opened Earth's crust for prebiotic chemistry Gaby Clark Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor Asteroids and planetesimals regularly bombarded Earth between about 4.6 billion and 3.5 billion years ago, during the Hadean and Archean eons. Because few rocks today are more than 4 billion years old, our understanding of the planet's environment during that time is limited. However, samples from the moon and its cratered surface hint at the period's rate of...
‘The enormity of the idea helped me’: how Patrick Gibson became gaming’s new James Bond
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Critical infrastructure in Western Sydney missing as funding plan comes to ends
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‘The enormity of the idea helped me’: how Patrick Gibson became gaming’s new James Bond
As Hollywood searches for its next iteration of the superspy, the actor explains how he earned pop culture’s most sought-after role – and how he’s taking 007 back to basicsThey expect you to die! The history of Bond in video games, from the good to the badIs any acting gig more contested than James Bond? Each week seems to bring a din of audition speculation so loud that it must be exhausting for the Elordis, Cavills and Dickinsons who are at the centre of it all.
Plug-in solar is soaring across Europe – but is it better than traditional rooftop panels?
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So You Want a Coat of Arms
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They expect you to die! The history of James Bond video games, from the good to the bad to the downright ugly
Interactive takes on MI6’s globetrotting spy have been around almost as long as the films, but that doesn’t mean all of them were a success. Here’s 007’s chequered past of hits, flops and oddities‘The enormity of the idea helped me’: how Patrick Gibson became gaming’s new James BondBond finally arrived in an official video game capacity in 1984, courtesy of Parker Brothers. The game grouped several 007 adventures (Diamonds Are Forever, The Spy Who Loved Me, Moonraker and For Your Eyes Only)...
What to read this weekend: The Dorians and Red Roots
What to read this weekend: The Dorians and Red Roots Here’s what we read and liked this week. Need something new for your reading list? This week, we recommend checking out The Dorians, a novel by Nick Cutter, and Lorenzo De Felici's comic series, Red Roots.
‘The enormity of the idea helped me’: how Patrick Gibson became gaming’s new James Bond
As Hollywood searches for its next iteration of the superspy, the actor explains how he earned pop culture’s most sought-after role – and how he’s taking 007 back to basicsThey expect you to die! The history of Bond in video games, from the good to the badIs any acting gig more contested than James Bond? Each week seems to bring a din of audition speculation so loud that it must be exhausting for the Elordis, Cavills and Dickinsons who are at the centre of it all.