Exhausted by today's political and environmental instability, Annalee Newitz investigated what a future Earth might look like. Get ready for green mining, soft cities and robo-taxis
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http://www.newscientist.com
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Updates
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Woolly mammoth DNA in an exceptional state of preservation has been obtained from 52,000-year-old freeze-dried 'jerky'. It’s even possible to reconstruct the 3D structure of the chromosomes, which may help efforts to resurrect the species.
Woolly mammoth DNA exceptionally preserved in freeze-dried 'jerky'
newscientist.com
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Horse therapy helps people with Alzheimer's disease socialise and improves their mood to a greater extent than music therapy, which is more established for supporting people with dementia
People with Alzheimer's disease benefit from spending time with horses
newscientist.com
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Menstrual pads and cups that make blood solidify into a gel-like substance appear to reduce the risks of leaks during a period.
Menstrual pads that turn blood solid could reduce the risk of leaks
newscientist.com
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A pair of lion brothers have been filmed making the longest swim ever recorded for their species – up to 1.5 kilometres – and one of them has only three legs. Learn more: https://lnkd.in/exDKsFEe
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You have probably heard that ultra-processed food is bad for you, but the scientific evidence for how it affects our health is far from conclusive. Why can't researchers just tell us what we should be eating?
Is ultra-processed food unhealthy? Here's why no one can agree
newscientist.com
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Feedback wonders if a little engineering knowhow might have come in handy in Glorit, New Zealand, where procedures were seemingly ignored during maintenance of an electrical power pylon
'Unprecedented and inconceivable': pylon falls over after nuts removed
newscientist.com
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When we lose a loved one, it has a profound effect on our bodies. Taking our grief outside offers us better healing in the long term than shutting it away, says Ruth Allen.
Why taking our grief out into nature can help us heal
newscientist.com
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When we lose a loved one, it has a profound effect on our bodies. Taking our grief outside offers us better healing in the long term than shutting it away, says Ruth Allen
Why taking our grief out into nature can help us heal
newscientist.com
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Two lions, one missing a leg, made a 1.5-kilometre swim through crocodile-infested waters in Uganda, probably in order to mate with females
Lions' record-breaking swim across channel captured by drone camera
newscientist.com