The Atlantic
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[:es]We Now Can See a Virus Mutate Like Never Before[:]
[:es]Tracking the coronavirus’s evolution, letter by letter, is revolutionizing pandemic science.[:]
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[:es]The Arctic Has a Cloud Problem[:]
[:es]Tiny iodine particles are clumping together to trap sunlight and melt polar sea ice.[:]
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[:es]An Ever-Moving, Unloved Fish Is Stirring Chaos in the North Atlantic[:]
[:es]When mackerel started showing up in Iceland, it started a decade-long fight over how to divide the ocean’s riches.[:]
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[:es]How Useful Is Recycling, Really?[:]
[:es]Among all possible climate actions, recycling ranks pretty low in its impact.[:]
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[:es]A Troubling New Pattern Among the Coronavirus Variants[:]
[:es]The most concerning versions of the virus are not simply mutating—they’re mutating in similar ways.[:]
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[:es]Astronomers Are Keeping a Close Watch on the Next Star Over[:]
[:es]They have noticed something intriguing coming from the direction of Proxima Centauri. [:]
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[:es]The Next Decade Could Be Even Worse[:]
[:es]A historian believes he has discovered iron laws that predict the rise and fall of societies. He has bad news.[:]
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[:es]Scylla and Charybdis[:]
[:es]Beyond climate denial and despair[:]
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[:es]The Molecular Biologist Who Exposed the Soviet Union[:]
[:es]Jacques Monod saw chance as one of the “secrets of life,” an idea he used to tear down all sorts of dogmas.[:]