Scientific American
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[:es]Suicide Data Reveal New Intervention Spots, Such as Motels and Animal Shelters[:]
[:es]Patterns show places where people who intend to kill themselves go—and give health workers better chances to stop them[:]
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[:es]Elite Athletes’ Gut Bacteria Give Rodent Runners a Boost[:]
[:es]The chemical these bacteria produce appears to enhance athleticism[:]
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[:es]What Prevents Pluto’s Ocean from Freezing?[:]
[:es]Layers of ice-like gas hydrates may insulate frigid ocean worlds across the cosmos [:]
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[:es]The Real Dino Killer: A One–Two Punch[:]
[:es]An asteroid impact and volcanoes acting together could have done in the beasts, new rock dates indicate[:]
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[:es]Should We Kill Off Disease-Causing Pests? Not So Fast[:]
[:es]Eradicating harmful species may have unintended consequences[:]
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[:es]Astronomers Traverse the Globe to Shadow “Lucky Stars”[:]
[:es]A surge in occultation science is allowing astronomers to study the sun’s asteroids, planets and moons like never before[:]
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[:es]Have We Mismeasured the Universe?[:]
[:es]New studies of the oldest light and sound in the cosmos suggest novel physics—rather than systematic errors—could explain an unsolved scientific mystery[:]
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[:es]Advanced Extraterrestrials as an Approximation to God[:]
[:es]Our first encounter with E.T. technology could be as baffling to us as a smartphone would have been to a Neandertal[:]
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[:es]The Cerebellum Is Your “Little Brain”—and It Does Some Pretty Big Things[:]
[:es]A newly identified circuit connecting the cerebellum to the brain’s reward centers in mice could help scientists understand autism and addiction[:]