Scientific American
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[:es]Our Memory Is Even Better Than Experts Thought[:]
[:es]In some respects, memory is poor. In others, it is astonishingly good[:]
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[:es]Brood X Cicadas Are Emerging at Last[:]
[:es]The Great Eastern Brood has been underground for 17 years. Here’s what the insects have been up to down there[:]
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[:es]Quantum Astronomy Could Create Telescopes Hundreds of Kilometers Wide[:]
[:es]Astronomers hope to use innovations from the subatomic world to construct breathtakingly large arrays of optical observatories[:]
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[:es]How a Carnivorous Mushroom Poisons Its Prey[:]
[:es]Scientists have known for decades that oyster mushrooms feasted on roundworms—and they’ve finally figured out how their toxins work[:]
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[:es]Is the Standard Model of Physics Now Broken?[:]
[:es]The discrepancy between the theoretical prediction and the experimentally determined value of the muon’s magnetic moment has become slightly stronger with a new result from Fermilab. But what does it […]
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[:es]Forgotten Memories of Traumatic Events Get Some Backing from Brain-Imaging Studies[:]
[:es]A new wave of research seeks neurological signatures for a type of amnesia[:]
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[:es]Guardians of the Microbial Galaxy[:]
[:es]Culture collections of bacteria play an unheralded but crucial role in science [:]
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[:es]Pilot Whales Show Possible Orca-Mimicking Repertoire[:]
[:es]Southern long-finned pilot whales’ calls could help them outsmart an apex predator[:]