Letters archive
Join the conversation in Âé¶¹´«Ã½'s Letters section, where readers can share their thoughts and opinions on articles and see responses from experts and enthusiasts across a range of science topics. To submit a letter, please see our terms and email letters@newscientist.com
4 March 2026
From Alastair Cardno, Ilkley, West Yorkshire, UK
Thanks to Michael Marshall for his fascinating account of the evolution of human hands. It was a curious experience reading about the development of our precision grip while being aware of using this grip to hold the magazine and turn its pages ( 21 February, p 32 ).
4 March 2026
From Patrick Hockey, Clunes, Victoria, Australia
It is difficult not to get excited about the idea that faecal transplants may hold the key to a new age of healthy living. But maintaining healthy gut flora will inevitably require a commitment to a healthy diet and exercise ( 7 February, p 9 ). In practice, the more likely outcome, given the scarcity …
4 March 2026
From Hilda Beaumont, Brighton, UK
You reported on the Dutch air force using AI to read pilots' brain waves to toughen training. Older readers might remember the 1982 film Firefox , starring Clint Eastwood as US pilot Mitchell Gant, who steals a Russian experimental fighter jet that can be controlled by the pilot's brain via a "thought control" helmet. In …
4 March 2026
From Peter Sutton, Guildford, Surrey, UK
An interesting article on the evolution of our chin. However, surely it misses the obvious: our chins could have evolved in parallel with our ability to think, as they play a crucial role in thinking and cogitation. I think, therefore I am ( 21 February, p 7 ).
11 March 2026
From Alan Hewer, Seaford, East Sussex, UK
I see that researchers have dismissed the likelihood of an advanced civilisation on planet K2-18b because no radio waves have been detected. This seems to be a narrow-minded approach. The earliest known civilisation on Earth was that of the Sumerians over 5000 years ago, and we can hardly call the ancient Egyptians and Greeks uncivilised. …
11 March 2026
From Dave Holtum, Bath, UK
Isabel Woodford's article on postnatal depression (PND) in fathers struck a chord with me. When my children were born in the early 1980s, PND wasn't recognised as a paternal issue. I don't recall feeling depressed myself, merely always tired, yet I was expected back at work the next day. Today, fathers are far more involved …
11 March 2026
From Shawn Charland, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
I was interested to read Ben Craven's letter concerning Paul Whitely's essay about the value of small changes in averting the climate crisis. Craven states that if every person and business in the world reduced their energy consumption by 1 per cent, the global decrease would be only 1 per cent, and we must therefore …
11 March 2026
From Michael Berkson, Cambridge, UK
Keith Pearce wonders whether seafaring was developed as rising water levels submerged an accustomed overland journey. I understand that Indigenous Australian accounts of journeys between what is now Tasmania and mainland Australia recognisably depict the seabed configuration of the Bass Strait. If the dates are appropriate, this suggests a land crossing to Tasmania ( Letters, …
11 March 2026
From Mark Pickin, Easingwold, North Yorkshire, UK
I have read your correspondence about this article and think that both the article and these letters miss a couple of important points. During the last glacial period, there were land bridges between Sicily and Malta and Gozo, which would have established the knowledge and the route. Secondly, the distance from Sicily to Malta is …
11 March 2026
From Rosemary Carter, Lewes, East Sussex, UK
Regarding your article about overcoming tiredness, after a distressing life event in 1995, my GP asked me if I needed sleeping tablets. I replied that I was getting very little sleep, but I had read an article in Âé¶¹´«Ã½ that said that students were found to do equally well in exams if they had …