The New Yorker
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[:es]Pandemics and the Shape of Human History[:]
[:es]Outbreaks have sparked riots and propelled public-health innovations, prefigured revolutions and redrawn maps.[:]
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[:es]The Neurons That Tell Time[:]
[:es]The discovery of brain structures that apparently mark time has raised a larger question: What is time, anyway?[:]
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[:eu]The despair of learning that experience no longer matters[:]
[:eu]Two Princeton economists suggest that rising white-working-class mortality might be related to another phenomenon: people are aging but aren’t getting what they think they’ve earned.[:]
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Helium Dreams
A new generation of airships is born.
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The Last of the Channel Island Turkeys
We often think of conservation in terms of wildlife sanctuaries and breeding programs, but its Janus face is eradication. The survival of one population of animals, like the fox, sometimes […]
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The Really Big One
The next full-margin rupture of the Cascadia subduction zone will spell the worst natural disaster in the history of the American continent.
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Listening to the Brain Below
Ever since the Columbia University anatomy professor Michael Gershon launched the field of neurogastroenterology, in 1999, by pointing out that the human gastrointestinal tract is home to some hundred million neurons, […]