The Economist
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[:eu]Cultural evolution and the mutilation of women[:]
[:eu]The consequences of FGM for a woman’s reproductive output[:]
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[:eu]Searching for particles on a benchtop[:]
[:eu]The beams of protons that circulate around the 27km-circumference ring of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), the world’s biggest particle accelerator, carry as much kinetic energy as an American aircraft-carrier […]
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[:eu]Two strange mammals illuminate the process of natural selection[:]
[:eu]What distantly related pandas reveal about genetics[:]
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[:eu]A cardboard centrifuge separates blood cells from plasma[:]
[:eu] TAKE a cardboard disc and punch two holes in it, close to, and on either side of, its centre. Thread a piece of string through each hole. Now, pull […]
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[:eu]A particle accelerator in the Middle East[:]
[:eu]A new synchrotron is about to start up in a surprising part of the world[:]
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[:eu]Misleading maps and problematic projections[:]
[:eu]Most schools teach a heavily distorted view of what the world looks like[:]
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[:eu]Stardust memories Finding micrometeorites in city gutters[:]
[:eu]A group of researchers have identified about 500 micrometeorites from an unlikely source: gutter sediment from the roofs of buildings in two of Europe’s capital cities.[:]
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[:eu]An atlas of where proteins are found in cells[:]
[:eu]Knowing a protein’s whereabouts within a cell will help researchers to determine its job[:]
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[:es]How to take pictures of exoplanets[:]
[:es]Finding exoplanets has become routine. The next step is to try to photograph them[:]