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Don’t Miss: missing green, a doomed sub, and a giant fatberg

Watch a film on a failed weapons-to-green project, play a controversial game about the doomed Kursk sub, and visit a show where the fatberg goes on growing

Don't miss pic

Visit

, a live art-science event in London by Thought Collider, begins on 10 October with experiments, performances and discussions around a constantly expanding fatberg in a tank.

Play

Innovation? Or exploitation? , out 11 October for Mac and PC, is touted as the first gameable documentary. It is about the grim fate of the crew of the doomed Russian nuclear submarine.

Read

Mohamed Noor’s : What Star Trek can teach us about evolution, genetics, and the origins of life (Princeton University Press) explores gene transfer, reproduction, natural selection, genetic drift, sexuality and dodgy facial prosthetics.

Watch

In 1976, staff facing the axe at an arms firm tried in vain to retool it for uses like green energy. , Steve Sprung’s film asking how such a chance was lost (pictured above), premieres at the BFI London Film Festival on 14 October.

Last chance

, London Tate Modern’s exhibition exploring the intertwined stories of pioneering photography and abstract art, ends on 14 October.

This article appeared in print under the headline “Don’t Miss”

Topics: Books and art / Energy and fuels / Fat / Genetics / photography