
GLAM CASVALUiR
@SinglaSlant
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JeSuis - in memory of - Mattias Philipson, Båstad
Joined June 2017
RT: @BBCScienceNews Astronomers stand up to satellite mega-constellations https://t.co/AkssiH7hqO
bbc.com
An international centre will defend the interests of science as thousands of satellites are launched.
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RT: @NatGeo Meet the nano-chameleon, which at about the size of a sunflower seed, fits on the tip of a finger and may be the smallest reptile on Earth https://t.co/UJbJhuOaXz
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CubeSats from @UofAlabama, @NMSU, @UCBerkeley and @NASA_Johnson are scheduled to lift off Feb. 5 on @Astra's ELaNa 41 mission—get the details: https://t.co/OdC3b5ggnP
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By accepting a negative thought, rather than getting stuck in a downward spiral of trying to combat it with counterarguments, an athlete can bring her focus back to the race or game at hand. https://t.co/xcxcQxtHaC
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Dive into the National Geographic archives for some images that reflect rest and recovery https://t.co/PvWpHrWN0A
nationalgeographic.com
Check out some of the beautiful vintage images our editor discovered in our vast photography archives.
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What killed this young boy found in a Medieval plague cemetery? Plague, yes, but researchers also diagnosed the earliest known case of another bacterium. https://t.co/any8qV7Fpc
sciencenews.org
DNA from a 6th century boy’s tooth reveals signs of the earliest known Haemophilus influenzae type b infection, shedding light on the pathogen’s history.
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This new study is another strand in the growing web of evidence that connects mining to mercury pollution in rivers, fish, and forests: https://t.co/Dwut5NZkTs
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Scientists have engineered tumor cells to secrete a protein that triggers a death switch in other tumor cells they find. #WorldCancerDay
https://t.co/IclHrJLpSu
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Ancient hunter-gatherers’ diet proved friendly to migrating farmers. https://t.co/Za6gJPrOfO
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Confined to a water droplet, nematodes displayed an ability rare in the animal kingdom. https://t.co/38zICjwXu2
sciencenews.org
Swarming, swimming nematodes can move together like fish and also synchronize their wiggling — an ability rare in the animal kingdom.
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Only the largest males get to mate, so the pressure to eat and grow is extreme. https://t.co/hMlg237rIv
sciencenews.org
Males will risk death to eat and grow as large as possible, since only the biggest males mate. But females aim for long-term survival.
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Looking at monthly extremes rather than annual averages revealed new benchmarks in how the ocean is changing. https://t.co/fh9L2CvTNX
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Techniques to genetically modify patient immune cells have revolutionized the fight against hard-to-treat cancers. But they can come with dangerous side effects. Now, researchers have found one reason why. #WorldCancerDay
https://t.co/7JBR6egeD7
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