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Swimming beneath the ocean

Swimming hundreds of feet beneath the ocean’s surface in many parts of the world are prolific architects called giant larvaceans. These zooplankton are not particularly giant themselves (they resemble tadpoles and are about the size of a pinkie finger), but…

Sounds from Earth

Space is full of radio waves, and those waves, just like the ones bouncing through the Earth's atmosphere, can be converted into audible sounds.

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Sifting through teaspoons of clay and sand scraped from the floors of caves, researchers have managed to isolate ancient human DNA without turning up a single bone.

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Swimming hundreds of feet beneath the ocean’s surface in many parts of the world are prolific architects called giant larvaceans. These zooplankton are not particularly giant themselves (they resemble tadpoles and are about the size of a pinkie finger), but…