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Fossil de Plesiosaurus remarkably well preserved from Germany shows that they had turtle skin

Skeleton of the New Plesiosaur in Urwelt-Museum Hauffa in Holzmaden, Germany. Credit: Klaus Nilkens/Urwelt-Museum Hauff. A Plesiosaur fossil of 183 million years found in Germany has preserved the soft tissue that reveals that the old marine reptiles had turtle scales. New research helps to give life to these prehistoric creatures in a way that has…

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Climate Change Weekly # 534 — Carbon Capture and Storage Is a Bad Climate Policy – Watts Up With That?

By H. Sterling Burnett SUBSCRIBE to Climate Change Weekly IN THIS ISSUE: Carbon Capture and Storage Is a Bad Climate Policy Brazil Is Not Meeting Paris Emission Commitments Climate Policies: Dramatically Higher Electricity Costs and Reduced Reliability in New England Carbon Capture and Storage Is a Bad Climate Policy The climate “hoax,” as President Donald…

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The ethical framework aims to counteract the risks of geoingeniery research

Heat registration, devastating storms, punishing drought. Our world continues to see the relentless impacts of climate change. Clearly requires urgent action, but as the research community investigates more and more climate intervention methods to address this challenge, we see an alarming lack of ethical guidance. That is why, promoted in association and promoted by wide…

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No more needles: Stanford scientists create a painless and alive vaccine that rubs the skin

Stanford scientists discovered that a harmless skin bacterium triggers a powerful immune response. By adjusting a bacterial protein, they made it a living vaccine, training the immune system to combat diseases such as tetanus and diphtheria. The mice administered this bioengineering bacteria developed a strong immunity, surviving doses of lethal toxins. With essays in humans…

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