Latest article

Guerilla Guest Blog

Date: 18th August 2010

Publication:

Summertime means music festival season for many, but revellers at some of this year’s events may encounter science alongside the singing

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Guerilla scientists infiltrate Secret Garden Party

Date: 23rd July 2010

Publication: The Guardian

Synaesthesia, Petra Boynton’s intimate places, communicating with the comatose and Marcus du Sautoy all feature at this weekend’s Secret Garden Party, courtesy of Guerilla Science.

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Greenheart: Scotland’s brave new world

Date: 9th July 2010

Publication: The Globe and Mail

Eco-erotica, cleaner whisky and wild animals – more independence means a more natural environment for visitors, too

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Can hookworms cure allergies?

Date: 2nd July 2010

Publication: Best Health

Some chronic allergy sufferers are infecting themselves with hookworm parasites to treat their symptoms. Does this therapy have merit or is it just an icky fad?

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News

Sonic Fire

1st May 2010

I’m still amazed it worked. I spent all of Tuesday with Steve Mould, physics presenter, as he built a Reuben’s Tube, just days before he was to perform with it at the Bethnal Green Working Men’s Club. And it went off without a hitch – check out the photos. Amazing.

Guerilla Science – Back For 2010

1st April 2010

Guerilla Science is back for 2010 – new website, new logo, and a new Flickr site with all the goods.

A sublime staycation

24th March 2010

I needed a vacation, and I got one: the great British seaside holiday. Such words conjure images of Mr Gumby sitting on a sorry-looking beach of horridly uncomfortable pebbles, his feet pathetically lapped by slate-grey, frigid water. But you’d be surprised how beautiful, colourful and spectacular this strange, wet little island can be. Joining my friends in Cornwall, near Padstow, I encountered some of the most stunning scenery I’ve ever seen in my life. There’s a reason this country is home to the word “sublime“.

Axis of Eco

21st December 2009

I have launched an independent environmental news website, www.axisofeco.com. Have a look at the ‘About’ for a sense of the mandate. Almost all of my work will now be published there first, so please consider that my home base from now on.

Copenhagen: Unmissable

9th December 2009

I will be embarking from London this Friday, December 11, and arriving in Copenhagen on the evening of the 12th, after more than 24 hours of trains, ferries, and reading. The decision to go was fairly last minute – I miraculously found accommodation with a friend of a friend (the city is fully booked for something ridiculous like a 100 kilometre radius), and a space on the ferry with some colleagues. It’s been an effort making the arrangements, but I realised that I simply couldn’t not go – there has never been any event like this, and quite possibly never will be ever again.

The evolution of music

21st October 2009

I will be speaking with Cafe Scientifique and Spirit of Play in Leeds tonight, 8pm at The Wardrobe, 3 St Peter’s Square. From the poster:

“Making music is one of the weirdest things we do – and the more you think about it, the weirder music becomes. How can some compositions sound “happy”, while others “sad”? Why in the world should ordered collections of notes give us goose-bumps, or stir our hearts just like the feeling of love? How you can you explain the fact that we are undeniably drawn to gathering in dark nightclubs with complete strangers just to experience noises – or that we collectively spend more money on music than on pornography or prescription drugs every year?

And yet every human culture makes music – not all have writing, or agriculture, but all make music. Why? Could it be something that we evolved to do for a reason? Could it predate language, and might other hominids have been musical too? And could music even hold the key to what makes us human in the first place? Change the way you think about music – and science – with Guerilla Scientist Zoe Cormier”

Axis Of Eco