The Atlantic
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[:es]Apparently This Is What a Swimming Dinosaur Looks Like[:]
[:es]Its features are so strange that scientists originally thought it might be a fake.[:]
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[:es]The Zombie Diseases of Climate Change[:]
[:es]What lurks in the Arctic’s thawing permafrost?[:]
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[:es]An Astonishing Video Shows CRISPR Editing DNA in Real Time[:]
[:es]The video is grainy, blobular, and dark, but for a molecule-scale movie, it is remarkably clear. You can see CRISPR, in real time, cleaving a strand of DNA in two.[:]
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[:es]Will the World’s Most Worrying Flu Virus Go Pandemic?[:]
[:es]There’s good news and bad news.[:]
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[:es]The Science Behind Mona Lisa’s Smile[:]
[:es]Leonardo da vinci liked to think that he was as good at engineering as he was at painting, and though this was not actually the case (nobody was as good […]
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[:es]The Golden Age of Animal Tracking[:]
[:es]Scientists may soon be able to monitor whole ecosystems in real time.[:]
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[:es]What Lies Beneath[:]
[:es]Buried deep under an island in the Baltic, the world’s first permanent nuclear-waste repository is nearing completion. If all goes according to plan, future generations may not know it’s there.[:]
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[:eu]The Milky Way’s Fastest Stars Might Be Stolen[:]
[:eu]New research suggests hypervelocity stars are runaways from another galaxy.[:]
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[:eu]The Challenge of Fighting Mistrust in Science[:]
[:eu]Emphasizing the way scientific findings play out in people’s everyday lives could help.[:]