The Atlantic
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[:es]Moving Stars Might Speed the Spread of Alien Life[:]
[:es]Intelligent planet-hoppers could populate a galaxy in as little as 650,000 years.[:]
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[:es]Nuclear Power Is Not the Moderate Answer to Climate Change[:]
[:es]The technology can do a lot of good. But it cannot match the ambition of a Green New Deal.[:]
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[:es]The ‘Golden Death’ Bacterium Found in a Rotten Apple[:]
[:es]This “spectacular” pathogen dissolves its host from inside out.[:]
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[:es]Rosalind, a New Mars Rover, Is in Rare Company[:]
[:es]The cosmos is crowded with the names of men, but a 2020 mission will make the balance a little less lopsided.[:]
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[:es]The Lab Discovering DNA in Old Books[:]
[:es]Artifacts have genetic material hidden inside, which can help scientists understand the past.[:]
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[:es]The Reason Some Hyperlocal Languages Survive[:]
[:es]Uncommon tongues are more likely to last when young people are actively speaking them.[:]
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[:es]The Gene That Turns Bees Mean[:]
[:es]Only a tiny difference separates docile workers from those that can dethrone a queen.[:]
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[:es]The Wild Experiment That Showed Evolution in Real Time[:]
[:es]By placing wild mice in large outdoor enclosures, an ambitious team of scientists has illustrated the full process of natural selection in a single study.[:]
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[:es]The 500-Year-Long Science Experiment[:]
[:es]In 2014, microbiologists began a study that they hope will continue long after they’re dead.[:]