The New York Times
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[:es]Rise of the Golden Jackal[:]
A species that was barely known in Europe now vastly outnumbers wolves there, and is rapidly spreading north and west.
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[:es]Rise of the Golden Jackal[:]
A species that was barely known in Europe now vastly outnumbers wolves there, and is rapidly spreading north and west.
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[:es]Ocean Warming Is Accelerating Faster Than Thought[:]
Scientists say the world’s oceans are warming far more quickly than previously thought, a finding with dire implications for climate change because almost all the excess heat absorbed by the […]
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[:es]The Sounds That Haunted U.S. Diplomats in Cuba? Lovelorn Crickets[:]
Diplomatic officials may have been targeted with an unknown weapon in Havana. But a recording of one “sonic attack” actually is the singing of a very loud cricket, a new […]
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[:es]The Far Side of the Moon: What China and the World Hope to Find[:]
The side of the moon we never see from Earth contains secrets about our solar system’s early days, and it could help astronomers see the universe more clearly.
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[:es]One of Nature’s Smallest Flowering Plants Can Survive Inside of a Duck[:]
If one duckweed lands where a bird relieves itself, it’s capable of eventually creating a dense mat of duckweeds where there were none before.
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[:es]Women in Rare Company Accept Nobel Prizes in Physics and Chemistry[:]
For the first time, female scientists had won the Nobel Prizes in Chemistry and Physics. And on Monday, they accepted their accolades at the same award ceremony in Stockholm.
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[:es]Russians Prepare for Spacewalk, Aiming to Solve a Space Station Mystery[:]
The two men will spend six hours examining and repairing a tiny hole that roiled space relations between the United States and Russia.
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[:es]Yes, the Octopus Is Smart as Heck. But Why?[:]
It has eight arms, three hearts — and a plan. Scientists aren’t sure how the cephalopods got to be so intelligent.