Scientific American
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[:es]This Sea Slug Can Chop Off Its Head and Grow an Entire New Body—Twice[:]
[:es]It is one of the “most extreme” examples of regeneration ever seen[:]
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[:es]100-Million-Year-Old Seafloor Sediment Bacteria Have Been Resuscitated[:]
[:es]The evidence mounts that bacteria can be effectively immortal[:]
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[:es]AI System Can Sniff Out Disease as Well as Dogs Do[:]
[:es]Researchers are training algorithms to emulate trained dogs’ ability to detect cancer and other diseases, perhaps including COVID-19[:]
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[:es]The Most Accurate Flat Map of Earth Yet[:]
[:es]A cosmologist and his colleagues tackle a centuries-old cartographic conundrum[:]
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[:es]Galaxy-Size Gravitational-Wave Detector Hints at Exotic Physics[:]
[:es]Recent results from a pulsar timing array, which uses dead stars to hunt for gravitational waves, has scientists speculating about cosmic strings and primordial black holes[:]
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[:es]Did a Supermassive Black Hole Influence the Evolution of Life on Earth?[:]
[:es]The idea isn’t as crazy as it might sound[:]
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[:es]The Evolutionary Origins of Friendship[:]
[:es]The emergence of this crucial kind of relationship relied on the ability to recognize the unique benefits others have to offer[:]
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[:es]Story of Mammoth Survival Is in the Soil[:]
[:es]Ancient DNA preserved in soil may rewrite what we thought about the Ice Age[:]
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[:es]Queen Bee Sperm Storage Holds Clues to Colony Collapse[:]
[:es]Analyzing fluid from queen bees’ specialized sperm sacs can expose stressors[:]