The Atlantic
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[:es]The Mystery of the Disappearing Elephant-Seal Dialects[:]
[:es]The first ever documented in another species of mammal, these dialects may have been a side effect of the seals’ encounters with humans. [:]
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[:es]Why So Many Sharks Have Bird Feathers in Their Bellies[:]
[:es]Spoiler: Migration is hard.[:]
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[:es]A Truly Remarkable Spider[:]
[:es]The spider Hyptiotes reinvented the concept of the web, building an extraordinary, spring-loaded trap.[:]
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[:es]Mysterious Rings Around Reefs Have No Simple Explanation[:]
[:es]These strange, barren halos are thought to be the work of fearful fish—but the reality is far more complicated. [:]
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[:es]The Cataclysmic Break That (Maybe) Occurred in 1950[:]
[:es]Sixty-nine years ago, a new geological era may have begun on Earth.[:]
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[:es]Netflix’s Our Planet Says What Other Nature Series Have Omitted[:]
[:es]In a groundbreaking move, the beautiful but uncomfortable documentary forces viewers to acknowledge their own complicity in the decline of nature.[:]
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[:es]The Worst Disease Ever Recorded[:]
[:es]A doomsday fungus known as Bd has condemned more species to extinction than any other pathogen.[:]
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[:es]Beware the Medusavirus[:]
[:es]A newly discovered giant virus turns its victims to “stone.”[:]
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[:es]The Very Optimistic New Argument for Dimming the Sky[:]
[:es]Geo-engineering won’t hurt a bit, at least compared with climate change—and it deserves serious investigation, according to the authors of a recent study.[:]