It was the year we learned of a spectacular smash-up in space, and scientists working on the world's biggest physics experiment delighted at collisions of an entirely different sort.
There were shockwaves, too, in Copenhagen, as the summit failed to reach a consensus on tackling climate change, instead merely noting a deal struck by major powers including the US and China.
The BBC's science reporter Paul Rincon looks back at the twists and turns of a year in science and the environment.
JANUARY
              
     Trends across Antarctica have been hard to discern
Scientists report that they have                detected large quantities of methane on Mars.                                              The gas should last for only a short time in the atmosphere until it is destroyed by sunlight, so it                must be being replenished.                                              Geochemical processes or microbial life                could be sources.                                                                                                                                                                                 
Rising greenhouse gases in our own atmosphere seem to be causing Antarctica to                warm in step                                with the rest of the world. Trends across the bulk of the continent have been hard to discern, mainly because data from land stations is scarce.                                             
This month also sees Iceland's outgoing administration                issue whaling quotas                                              that are substantially enlarged from those in previous years. The incoming interim government allows hunting to                go ahead in 2009                                              but leaves in doubt whether the practice will continue.                                                                                         
FEBRUARY
Two satellites - one American, the other Russian - annihilate each other when they                collide in low-Earth orbit.billions to one.                                              Other long-time observers argue that it highlights a                growing problem of overcrowding in space.                                                                                          Some commentators put the odds of such an event occurring at                                                                                                                                                     
     |   There are many thousands of manmade objects in orbit | 
There is bad news for another satellite this month. Nasa's first dedicated mission to measure carbon dioxide from space                crashes into the ocean near Antarctica                                              following a rocket malfunction.                                             
Meanwhile, Nasa and the European Space Agency decide to                forge ahead with an ambitious plan                                to send probes to the Jupiter system and its icy moon Europa. But the missions will cost several billion dollars/euros to build and execute and might never fly if other endeavours become higher research priorities.                                             
MARCH
              
     Alluvial fans on Mars appear to have been carved out by running water
The biggest ever investigation into a climate change fix known as "ocean fertilisation"                reports modest results.                                                                            The technique involves tipping iron filings into the ocean to stimulate the growth of algae, which absorb the greenhouse gas CO2 from the air. 
There are no oceans on Mars today, but the Red Planet                did have running water on its surface                                              just over a million years ago, according to a team from Brown University in Rhode Island.                                             
In separate research, the University of Michigan's Dr Nilton Renno says                droplets of liquid water                                can be seen in photos of a landing leg strut from Nasa's Phoenix lander, which touched down on Mars in 2008. Dr Renno makes the claim at a meeting in Houston, Texas, where scientists                                             present early results                                              from the mission.                                             
APRIL
Tuned to see the high-energy gamma-rays emitted from extreme cosmic events, Nasa's Swift telescope picks up the                most distant single object ever detected                                              - the cataclysmic explosion of a giant star some 13 billion light-years away.                                            
     |   President Obama said it was time for the US to take a lead on innovation | 
By comparison, the star Gliese 581 is a mere hop and a skip away. It is around this sun that astronomers find                the "lightest" planet ever detected                                                                                          outside our Solar System. This "exoplanet" is about twice as massive as the Earth, but too hot to support life. 
This month US President Barack Obama sets a goal of                devoting 3% of gross domestic product (GDP)                                to US research and development. During a speech in Washington DC, he says the US should lead on innovation, adding that, over the years, "scientific integrity has been undermined and scientific research politicised".                                             
MAY
              
     This was the last re-fit for the orbiting observatory
The space shuttle Atlantis                blasts off from Florida                                              on a risky mission to fix the Hubble Space Telescope. This is the last re-fit for the orbiting observatory. Nasa subsequently                releases remarkable images                                              from the upgraded telescope - including its                deepest view of the Universe                                              - proving the servicing mission was an outstanding success.                                                                                                                                    
     |   The preservation was so good, it was possible to see an outline of fur  | 
Just as dazzling were the beautifully preserved remains of a 47-million-year-old fossil primate,                unveiled amid great fanfare  in New York. The specimen, nicknamed Ida, is claimed to be a "missing link" between today's higher primates - monkeys, apes and humans - and more distant relatives.                                                                            
A scientific paper                published in Nature journal                                              later concludes that Ida belonged to a group more closely linked to lemurs and lorises than to higher primates like humans.                                             
May is also the month that the European Space Agency launches its Herschel and Planck telescopes. The former will study the birth of stars and galaxies; and how they evolve over time; the latter will map the "oldest light" in the cosmos to understand better its contents and structure. 
JUNE
              
     Japan is the world's most ardent whaling nation
The Periodic Table will                get a new addition,                                              it is announced. The "super heavy" element 112 is                named "copernicium",                                              with the symbol Cp, in honour of the astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus.                                                                                         
June also sees the International Whaling Commission (IWC)                hold its annual meeting                                              on the Portuguese island of Madeira. Pro- and anti-whaling nations agree to                further compromise talks                                at the end of the meeting. But the gathering defers a decision on a controversial bid from Greenland to add humpback whales to its annual hunt.                                                                                         
Meanwhile, a study suggests that climate could have a                direct effect on the speed of "molecular evolution"                                in mammals. The authors found that, among pairs of mammals of the same species, the DNA of those living in warmer climates changes at a faster rate.                                             
JULY
Meeting in the Italian city of L'Aquila, G8 nations agree to                cut their greenhouse gas emissions                                by 80% by 2050. The world overall should halve them by 2050, say the leaders. But UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon says big cuts are needed sooner rather than later.                                            
     |   Nasa released images of Apollo hardware on the Moon | 
International co-operation is also on the agenda for the European and US space agencies which announce plans to                team up on unmanned missions                                              to Mars following a                two-day summit.                                              But the new roadmap                means a further delay                                              for Europe's troubled ExoMars rover mission.                                                                                                                                     
While the "Plymouth Scenario" sets out a plan for the future, this is also a month for celebrating the past. July marks the 40th anniversary of thefirst manned mission to land on the Moon.                                              Nasa releases                images of the Apollo landing sites on the Moon                                              taken by the recently launched                Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter.                                                                                                                                                                                  
AUGUST
              
     Physical stresses seem to be behind the bears' shrinking size
The mighty               polar bear                                             and Scotland's                Soay sheep                                both appear to be shrinking in size, according to separate studies. A number of factors are involved, including pollution in the case of the bears, and climate change, in the case of Soay sheep.                                                                                        
    Clever rooks recreate an ancient fable
 Further insights came to light this month from an ongoing effort to unravel the Neanderthal genome. Research shows Neanderthals shared with modern humans the                                             gene for tasting bitter flavours.                                The full genome will be published next year and could shed light on the appearance, behaviour and intelligence of our close cousins. 
Rooks show that they are smarter than the average bird: British researchers manage to get the corvids to                recreate one of Aesop's Fables.                                In the 2,000-year-old tale, a crow uses stones to raise the water level in a pitcher so it can reach the liquid to quench its thirst. Rooks, which are related to crows, do just the same when presented with a similar scenario.                                             
SEPTEMBER
Satellite data shows this summer's melt of Arctic sea ice has                not been as profound                                as in the previous two years. Cooler Arctic temperatures this year and winds helping to disperse the sea ice are among the reasons, scientists suggest. But they note the long-term trend is still downwards.                                            
     |   The Ares I may not be the future after all | 
This month also sees the panel set up to review America's manned spaceflight plans                deliver its summary findings.                                              The final report strongly                backs the use of commercial services                                              to launch astronauts, and casts doubt on the future of                Nasa's Ares I rocket.                                                                                                                                                                                 
A manned mission to Mars may be a long way off, but one of the robotic spacecraft in orbit around the Red Planet reveals                evidence of white material                                              exposed by fresh meteorite impacts fading over time - behaviour expected of ice. Data from three spacecraft reveal that                very fine films of H2O                                              coat the particles that make up the Moon's soil.                                                                                         
OCTOBER
              
     Over 17 years, the team reconstructed what "Ardi" looked like
Researchers describe a                4.4 million-year-old ancient human creature                                - nicknamed "Ardi" - that may be a direct ancestor to us. The 17-year investigation of the fossils is named as Science journal's                                             big breakthrough of 2009.                                                                                         
     |   The mountain chicken frog has been devastated by chytrid fungus | 
Nasa was hoping for its own big breakthrough as it                smashed a rocket and probe                                              into a crater on the Moon in a bid to find water. The mission is hailed as a success when analysis of the impact plume                reveals copious quantities               of water-ice and water vapour.                                                                                                                        
Another watery tale comes in the form of the fossilised skull, uncovered in Dorset, of a                colossal "sea monster",                                              which terrorised the oceans 150 million years ago. Just as ferocious, in its own way, is the chytrid fungus, which is                devastating amphibian populations                                              worldwide. A major study                unravels the mechanism                                              by which the fungus kills.                                                                                                                                     
NOVEMBER
              
     The Compact Muon Solenoid is one of two multi-purpose detectors at the LHC
The Large Hadron Collider experiment                re-starts after a 14-month hiatus                                              while the machine                was being repaired.                                Two stable proton beams are circulated in opposite directions around the vast underground machine. The collider swiftly makes its                                             first proton beam collisions                                              and                breaks the energy record                                              for a particle accelerator.                                                                                                                                     
November also sees the publication of a major study showing that mass loss from the Greenland ice sheet                quickened between 2006 and 2008.                                              Melting of the entire sheet would raise sea levels globally by about 7m (20ft), scientists say.                                             
This is also the month of "ClimateGate", in which                hundreds of e-mails hacked or leaked                                              from a leading UK climate research unit are released on the web. Some climate sceptic websites seize on the content and an                independent review is set up                                              to look into their allegations of the manipulation or suppression of data.                                                                                         
DECEMBER
              
     The presence of so many world leaders did not help secure a global agreement
After two weeks of frantic negotiations, the 193-nation climate summit in Copenhagen ends with delegates                taking note               of a deal,                without formally adopting it                                             . The                non-binding pact                                              brokered by US President Barack Obama with China and other main powers is                lambasted by campaigners                                             and a few developing nations.                                                                                                                                                                                                               
    Octopus snatches coconut and runs
 On the other side of the world, Australian marine biologists film an octopus snatching and then                making off with a coconut.                                They say it represents the first evidence of "tool use" by an invertebrate. December also sees a decision to bring the many arms of Whitehall with interests in space                                             under the umbrella of a dedicated UK agency                                             to direct policy in this area. But the UK's pre-budget report                unveils swingeing cuts                                              to science funding.                                                                                         
As the year draws to a close, researchers in the US say they                have seen tantalising glimpses                                of the elusive "stuff" known as dark matter which makes up some 25% of the Universe. They will try to verify the findings next year, making this story one to watch for 2010.                                             
 
  
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