-
1 × ₦6,900
-
1 × ₦1,100
-
2 × ₦3,750
-
1 × ₦6,900
-
1 × ₦3,100
-
1 × ₦2,700
-
1 × ₦3,600
-
1 × ₦5,600
-
1 × ₦17,100
-
1 × ₦4,300
-
1 × ₦2,940
-
1 × ₦6,900
-
1 × ₦4,100
-
1 × ₦1,500
-
1 × ₦5,800
-
1 × ₦2,500
-
1 × ₦2,100
-
1 × ₦5,600
-
1 × ₦8,500
-
1 × ₦4,700
-
1 × ₦4,000
-
1 × ₦5,600
-
1 × ₦7,500
-
1 × ₦2,300
-
1 × ₦5,000
-
1 × ₦4,900
-
1 × ₦5,800
-
1 × ₦6,300
-
1 × ₦1,450
-
1 × ₦2,000
-
1 × ₦1,600
-
1 × ₦5,000
-
1 × ₦1,900
-
1 × ₦6,700
Every year, readers send in thousands of questions to New Scientist, the world’s best-selling science weekly, in the hope that the answers to them will be given in the ‘Last Word’ column – regularly voted the most popular section of the magazine.
Does Anything Eat Wasps? is a collection of the best that have appeared, including: Why can’t we eat green potatoes? Why do airliners suddenly plummet? Does a compass work in space? Why do all the local dogs howl at emergency sirens? How can a tree grow out of a chimney stack? Why do bruises go through a range of colours? Why is the sea blue inside caves? Many seemingly simple questions are actually very complex to answer. And some that seem difficult have a very simple explanation. New Scientist’s ‘Last Word’ celebrates all questions – the trivial, the idiosyncratic, the baffling and the strange. This selection of the best is popular science at its most entertaining and enlightening.







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