The Atlantic
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[:es]A ‘Mic Drop’ on a Theory of Language Evolution[:]
Linguists now think our ancestors might have been chattering away for ages longer than they previously believed.
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[:es]The Wonder of Fire Without Gravity[:]
It’s about to get lit on the International Space Station.
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[:es]An Alarming Discovery in an Astronaut’s Bloodstream[:]
A study has turned up a side effect of human spaceflight that no one had observed before.
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[:es]Apes Might Know That You Don’t Know What They Know[:]
The latest volley in a decades-long debate about apes’ theory of mind involved one scientist dressing up as King Kong and stealing from his colleague.
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[:es]The Secret Identity of a Coyote-Like Creature[:]
A photographer began shooting unusual-looking coyotes on Galveston Island. They turned out to be descended from a very rare wolf species.
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[:es]The Chickens That Are Surrogates for Rare Breeds[:]
A new way to revive rare breeds—and perhaps even endangered birds—from frozen cells
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[:es]Why the Search for Dark Matter Depends on Ancient Shipwrecks[:]
Errant particles from everyday radioactive materials are a major obstacle for particle physicists. The solution? Lead from the bottom of the sea.
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[:es]The Yogurt Industry Has Been Using CRISPR for a Decade[:]
Long before there were CRISPR babies, there was CRISPR dairy.
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[:es]A Lesson for Ravens: Don’t Eat the Tortoises[:]
Can fake tortoise shells teach predators to stop devouring soft-shelled juveniles?