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Why Life on Mars May Be Impossible Mars is a lousy place to try to live—what with the paralyzing cold, the blistering radiation and the thin carbon dioxide atmosphere.
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A trillion-ton iceberg the size of Delaware is about to break off Antarctica An enormous iceberg, over 2,000 square miles in area - or nearly the size of Delaware - is poised to detach from one of the largest floating ice shelves in Antarctica and float off in the Weddell Sea, south of the tip of South America.
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Global Warming Might Be Speeding Up When it comes to climate change, the Earth doesn't cook evenly. But as cooler areas catch up, a study says things will get hotter faster.
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Ancient land-dwelling crocodile had T. rex sized teeth, study shows A paleoartistic restoration of Razanandrongobe sakalavae scavenging on a sauropod carcass in the Middle Jurassic of Madagascar. Unlike extant crocodilians, this terrestrial predator had a deep skull and walked on erect limbs.
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CERN Physicists Find a Particle With a Double Dose of Charm Using the Vertex Locator at the CERN particle physics laboratory, physicists discovered a new particle that contains two charm quarks.
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Why Total Solar Eclipses Are So Rare The solar eclipse that will cross the continental U.S. this Aug. 21 will attract a huge audience - and rightly so. The millions of people who are expected to witness the astronomical event won't show up just because solar eclipses are exceedingly ...
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Great Barrier Reef Not 'In Danger' Despite Devastating Bleaching, Says UNESCO "Serious concern" about the threats facing the reef remain, though, according to the United Nations agency. By Dominique Mosbergen.
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ESA unveils third mission to Mercury to investigate water ice and volcanoes Artist's impression of the BepiColombo spacecraft at Mercury. The mission comprises ESA's Mercury Planetary Orbiter (foreground) and Jaxa's Mercury Magnetospheric Orbiter.
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Saturn's Moon Titan May Have the Perfect Landing Spot For Spacecraft Saturn's largest moon, Titan, is a giant nightmare beach. While its electrically charged sand wouldn't make for a relaxing vacation, new research suggests the planet might not be as hostile to robotic visitors as we think.
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