Nature News
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[:es]The fight for control over virtual fossils[:]
[:es]Palaeontologists have been urged to share 3D scans of fossils online, but a Nature analysis finds that few researchers do so.[:]
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[:es]China sets sights on first solar power stations in space[:]
[:es]The country has a plan to overcome the challenges experienced by other nations.[:]
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[:es]Four new DNA letters double life’s alphabet[:]
[:es]Synthetic DNA seems to behave like the natural variety, suggesting that chemicals beyond nature’s four familiar bases could support life on Earth.[:]
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[:es]Faster, better, cheaper: the rise of CRISPR in disease detection[:]
[:es]Powerful gene-editing tool could help to diagnose illnesses such as Lassa fever early and rein in the spread of infection.[:]
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[:es]Gravitational-wave observatory LIGO set to double its detecting power[:]
[:es]A planned $35-million upgrade could enable LIGO to spot one black-hole merger per day by the mid-2020s.[:]
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[:es]Tainted water: the scientists tracing thousands of fluorinated chemicals in our environment[:]
[:es]Researchers are struggling to assess the dangers of nondegradable compounds used in clothes, foams and food wrappings.[:]
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[:es]Trail of feathers to the Neanderthal mind[:]
[:es]Bernard Wood explores a claim that our nearest cousins were our cognitive equals — and that birds had a part to play in that. [:]
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[:es]Black-hole jets begin to reveal their antimatter secrets[:]
[:es]The first simulations of matter and antimatter particles swirling around a rotating black hole hint at the origins of the enigmatic jets.[:]
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[:es]A gut punch fights cancer and infection[:]
[:es]Microorganisms in the human gut can affect immune-system cells. Gut bacterial strains have been discovered that boost immune cells that have cell-killing capacity and that can target cancer and protect […]