Nature News
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[:es]Collapsing glaciers threaten Asia’s water supplies[:]
[:es]Tracking moisture, snow and meltwater across the ‘third pole’ will help communities to plan for climate change, argue Jing Gao and colleagues. [:]
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[:es]First hint of near-room-temperature superconductor tantalizes physicists[:]
[:es]High-pressure hydrogen materials could be a step towards a new era of superconductivity. [:]
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[:es]Fossils tell a colourful tale[:]
[:es]Fluffy pterosaurs offer vibrant insight into Mesozoic evolution. [:]
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[:es]‘Transmissible’ Alzheimer’s theory gains traction [:]
[:es]Mouse tests confirm that sticky proteins associated with degenerative brain diseases can be transferred — but researchers say risks for humans are likely to be minimal. [:]
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[:es]Baby gene edits could affect a range of traits[:]
[:es]Gene targeted for its role in HIV is linked to increased severity of other infectious diseases — and has implications for learning in mice.[:]
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[:es]The silent epidemic killing more people than HIV, malaria or TB[:]
[:es]Viral hepatitis is on the rise. Tackling hepatitis B in Africa is key to fighting back.[:]
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[:es]Algeria fossils cast doubt on East Africa as sole origin of stone tools[:]
[:es]The discovery pushes back the evidence of hominins in Algeria by 600,000 years, and suggests tool use arose in different parts of Africa independently. [:]
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[:es]Mini-tumours turn immune cells into cancer fighters[:]
[:es]Personalized white blood cells attack tumours after incubation with cancer tissue. [:]
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[:es]The microscope revolution that’s sweeping through materials science[:]
[:es]Technological advances are transforming what researchers can study at the atomic scale. [:]