Nature News
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[:es]Small, furry and powerful: are mouse lemurs the next big thing in genetics?[:]
[:es] More-human than mice, the world’s tiniest primates may just have what it takes to become the next top model organism. [:]
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[:es]The human body is a mosaic of different genomes[:]
[:es] Survey finds that ‘normal’ human tissues are riddled with mutations. [:]
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[:es]Venus is Earth’s evil twin — and space agencies can no longer resist its pull[:]
[:es] Once a water-rich Eden, the hellish planet could reveal how to find habitable worlds around distant stars. [:]
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[:es]Blood stem cells produced in vast quantities in the lab[:]
[:es]A glue ingredient was the secret to getting the mouse cells to multiply outside the body. [:]
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[:es]Can tracking people through phone-call data improve lives?[:]
[:es]Researchers have analysed anonymized phone records of tens of millions of people in low-income countries. Critics question whether the benefits outweigh the risks. [:]
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[:es]Google revives controversial cold-fusion experiments[:]
[:es]Researchers tested mechanisms linked to nuclear fusion at room temperature — but found no evidence for the phenomenon. [:]
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[:es]Billion-year-old fossils set back evolution of earliest fungi[:]
[:es]Microscopic specimens discovered in the Canadian Arctic are surprisingly intricate. [:]
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[:es]Anthropocene now: influential panel votes to recognize Earth’s new epoch[:]
[:es]Atomic Age would mark the start of the current geologic time unit, if proposal receives final approval. [:]
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[:es]Physical kilogram is officially dead[:]
[:es]Definitions of four basic scientific units, including the kilogram and the kelvin, now rely on fundamental constants rather than arbitrary measures. [:]