The Atlantic
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[:es]The Dawn of Interplanetary Geology[:]
[:es]NASA’s newest Mars mission is poised to transform the most terrestrial of sciences.[:]
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[:es]Psychology’s Replication Crisis Is Running Out of Excuses[:]
[:es]Another big project has found that only half of studies can be repeated. And this time, the usual explanations fall flat.[:]
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[:es]Is Gender Written Into Your Skeleton?[:]
[:es]The study of human bones complicates a strict binary definition of sex.[:]
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[:es]The Incredible Shrinking Planet[:]
[:es]Mercury has shriveled over billions of years, and it’s got the landforms to prove it.[:]
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[:es]The Incredible Shrinking Planet[:]
[:es]Mercury has shriveled over billions of years, and it’s got the landforms to prove it.[:]
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[:es]The Pasta in Our Stars[:]
[:es]Why scientists use gnocchi and lasagna to explain one of the most bizarre objects in the universe[:]
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[:es]Meet the Endoterrestrials[:]
[:es]They live thousands of feet below the Earth’s surface. They eat hydrogen and exhale methane. And they may shape our world more profoundly than we can imagine.[:]
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[:es]Hubble’s Hardware Woes and the Painful Era of Aging Spacecraft[:]
[:es]Four of NASA’s most recognizable missions are in “safe mode” or unable to communicate with Earth.[:]
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[:es]Why Men Sexually Harass Women[:]
[:es]Men vastly outnumber women among sexual harassers. The reason has more to do with culture than with intrinsic maleness.[:]