The Atlantic
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[:es]The Clock Is Ticking on America’s ‘Feral Swine Bomb’[:]
Wild pigs are running rampant—and doing billions of dollars of damage each year.
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[:es]A New Solution to Climate Science’s Biggest Mystery[:]
For the first time in 41 years, researchers have provided a new answer to one of the thorniest—and most fundamental—questions in Earth science.
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[:es]The Rush to Sock Away Glacier Ice Before It All Melts[:]
A snow-covered vault in Antarctica could help preserve chunks of disappearing glaciers.
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[:es]The People Who Risked Death for Immunity[:]
When yellow fever swept through 19th-century New Orleans, immunity became so valuable, people were willing to go to extreme lengths for protection.
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[:es]The Four Rules of Pandemic Economics[:]
A playbook that should govern America’s short-term reaction to the health crisis.
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[:es]The Perks of Being a Weirdo[:]
How not fitting in can lead to creative thinking
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[:es]The Last Giraffes on Earth[:]
The planet’s tallest animal is in far greater danger than people might think.
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[:es]The Small Stresses of Keeping Coronavirus-Free[:]
Why is it so, so hard to stop touching your face?
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[:es]A Tiny, Lab-Size Wormhole Could Shatter Our Sense of Reality[:]
How scientists plan to set up two black holes and a wormhole on an ordinary tabletop