The Atlantic
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[:es]No One Knows Exactly What Would Happen If Mosquitoes Were to Disappear[:]
[:es]A four-year experiment sets out to study the ecological consequences of a bold scheme to end malaria.[:]
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[:es]Geologists Are Feuding About the Collapse of Civilization[:]
[:es]The year’s most acrimonious scientific fight is a mega-drama over a mega-drought.[:]
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[:es]When Shadows Are Not What They Seem[:]
[:es]By picking up on patterns too subtle for humans to notice, non-line-of-sight imaging can see around corners and through walls[:]
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[:es]Why the Wildfires of 2018 Have Been So Ferocious[:]
[:es]It’s the heat, not the humidity.[:]
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[:es]The Mystery of the Ancient Volcano That May Have Inspired Atlantis[:]
[:es]Experts still vehemently disagree over when one of the biggest eruptions of the Holocene actually happened.[:]
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[:es]Scientists Have Uncovered a Disturbing Climate Change Precedent[:]
[:es]During the rise of mammals, Earth’s temperatures spiked in a scary way that the planet may experience again soon.[:]
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[:es]‘Find Your Passion’ Is Awful Advice[:]
[:es]A major new study questions the common wisdom about how we should choose our careers.[:]
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[:es]NASA Just Released the Song of the Summer[:]
[:es]The plasma waves between Saturn and its icy moon Enceladus sound like eerie music to our ears.[:]
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[:es]The Mysterious Microbes in the Sky[:]
[:es]Scientists are just beginning to understand how microscopic organisms that rise out of the ocean can help manage global temperatures.[:]