Nature News
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[:es]The lost art of looking at plants[:]
[:es]Advances in genomics and imaging are reviving a fading discipline.[:]
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[:es]Could baby’s first bacteria take root before birth?[:]
[:es]The womb was thought to be sterile, but some scientists argue that it’s where the microbiome begins.[:]
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[:es]Step aside CERN: There’s a cheaper way to break open physics[:]
[:es]How tabletop experiments could find evidence of new particles, offering a glimpse beyond the standard model.[:]
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[:es]How to see a memory[:]
[:es]Every memory leaves its own imprint in the brain, and researchers are starting to work out what one looks like.[:]
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[:es]How the immune system could stymie some CRISPR gene therapies[:]
[:es]Researchers hoping to treat diseases caused by genetic mutations may have to seek alternative enzymes.[:]
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[:es]What to expect in 2018: science in the new year[:]
[:es]Moon missions, ancient genomes and a publishing showdown are set to shape research.[:]
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[:es]Could Bitcoin technology help science?[:]
[:es]Blockchain could lend security measures to the scientific process, but the approach has its own risks.[:]
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[:es]Open countries have strong science[:]
[:es]Caroline S. Wagner and Koen Jonkers find a clear correlation between a nation’s scientific influence and the links it fosters with foreign researchers.[:]
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[:es]Ebola survivors still immune to virus after 40 years[:]
[:es]People who beat infection in 1976 can make antibodies against Ebola today.[:]