The New York Times
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[:es]Sneezing Dogs, Dancing Bees: How Animals Vote[:]
The 2020 election is off to a complicated start. Maybe we can draw some comparative political lessons from the animal kingdom.
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[:es]Down on the Farm That Harvests Metal From Plants[:]
Hyper-accumulating plants thrive in metallic soil that kills other vegetation, and botanists are testing the potential of phytomining.
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[:es]The Further Adventures of Betelgeuse, the Fainting Star[:]
The red supergiant is no closer to exploding, it seems. It also no longer appears round.
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[:es]Asteroid That Killed the Dinosaurs Was Great for Bacteria[:]
The smoldering crater left by the apocalyptic space rock became a nice home for blue-green algae within years of the impact.
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[:es]These Images Show the Sun’s Surface in Greater Detail Than Ever Before[:]
A new telescope in Hawaii takes aim at our nearest star and its mysteries.
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[:es]Even Hermit Crabs Have Wealth Inequality[:]
The distribution of shells in one population of hermit crabs matched how wealth is shared in some human societies.
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[:es]How to Peer Through a Wormhole[:]
Theoretically, the universe may be riddled with tunnels through space and time. Two scientists have now proposed a way to detect the existence of a cosmic escape hatch.
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[:es]A Nazi Version of DDT Was Forgotten. Could It Help Fight Malaria?[:]
Scientists have rediscovered a compound developed by German researchers during World War II. It appears to be more effective and perhaps safer than DDT.
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[:es]How Will Climate Change Alter Agriculture? Winemakers Are Finding Out[:]
Wine, which is among the most sensitive and nuanced of agricultural products, demonstrates how climate change is transforming traditions and practices that may be centuries old.