Nature News
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[:es]Ocean data need a sea change to help navigate the warming world[:]
[:es] Open up, share and network information so that marine stewardship can mitigate climate change, overfishing and pollution. [:]
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[:es]‘It opens up a whole new universe’: Revolutionary microscopy technique sees individual atoms for first time[:]
[:es]Cryo-electron microscopy breaks a key barrier that will allow the workings of proteins to be probed in unprecedented detail. [:]
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[:es]Survival of the littlest: the long-term impacts of being born extremely early[:]
[:es] Babies born before 28 weeks of gestation are surviving into adulthood at higher rates than ever, and scientists are checking in on their health. [:]
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[:es]How countries are using genomics to help avoid a second coronavirus wave[:]
[:es] Scientists in New Zealand, the United Kingdom and other places are using sequence data to track new infections as lockdowns ease. [:]
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[:es]An almost perfectly efficient light-activated catalyst for producing hydrogen from water[:]
[:es] Efforts to make hydrogen from water directly using sunlight have been hampered by the inefficiency of the catalysts that promote the process. A model system demonstrates that almost perfectly […]
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[:es]Short-term tests validate long-term estimates of climate change[:]
[:es] Six-hour weather forecasts have been used to validate estimates of climate change hundreds of years from now. Such tests have great potential — but only if our weather-forecasting and […]
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[:es]Carbon dating, the archaeological workhorse, is getting a major reboot[:]
[:es] A long-anticipated recalibration of radiocarbon dating could shift the age of some prehistoric samples hundreds of years [:]
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[:es]The new science of volcanoes harnesses AI, satellites and gas sensors to forecast eruptions[:]
[:es] Forty years after the Mount St Helens eruption galvanized volcano researchers, they are using powerful new tools to spy on the world’s most dangerous mountains. [:]