Scientific American
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[:es]Trees Have the Potential to Live Indefinitely[:]
Trees die as a result of severe damage, but some have overcome storms, droughts, fires, and more to survive for thousands of years
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[:es]How Our Brain Preserves Our Sense of Self[:]
One brain region is crucial for our ability to form and maintain a consistent identity both now and when thinking about the future
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[:es]DNA in Air Can Catalog Hidden Insects All around Us[:]
New proof-of-concept research shows how environmental DNA (eDNA) technology could be used to assess what is buzzing by
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[:es]New Clues about the Origins of Biological Intelligence[:]
A common solution is emerging in two different fields: developmental biology and neuroscience
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[:es]The Surprising Secret of Snakes’ Venomous Bites[:]
Fangs evolved over and over because of this groovy process
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[:es]Life Is Complicated—Literally, Astrobiologists Say[:]
A new theory suggests that searches for molecular complexity could uncover convincing evidence of extraterrestrial life, and soon
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[:es]FAST, the World’s Largest Radio Telescope, Zooms in on a Furious Cosmic Source[:]
China’s Five-Hundred-Meter Aperture Spherical Radio Telescope has detected more than 1,600 fast radio bursts from a single enigmatic system
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[:es]High-Flying Sensor Detects Living Things from Far Above[:]
A new detector could keep tabs on life on Earth—and maybe beyond