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The new ‘Bone Collector’ caterpillar wears the remains of its prey – and we have the footage to prove it

A newly discovered caterpillar species has a macabre fashion sense, to say the least
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Deadly peanut allergies could be prevented with simple new method

Adults with severe peanut allergies were trained to tolerate handfuls of peanuts in a new study
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Scientists analysed 8 million US speeches – and uncovered a surprising trend

Machine learning has revealed how US political rhetoric shifted from evidence to emotion over the past 140 years
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Long-lost land bridge may finally explain how – and where – humans migrated out of Africa

The ancestors of humans, elephants and giraffes were shaped by hot rocks bubbling up from the Earth's mantle
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New issue: Earth's Final Frontier

Iceland sits upon two continental plates – the Eurasian plate and the North American plate. These huge chunks of Earth’s surface are yawning apart at a pace of 2cm (just shy of 1in) every year. This movement creates fissures in Earth’s surface, like cracks in its shell. In Iceland, the Silfra fissure sits over an aquifer, where glacial meltwater gathers underground, and so this crack became a lake. It's the only body of water in the world that you can dive into and find yourself swimming between two tectonic plates. You can, almost, reach out and touch the Eurasian plate with one hand and the North American plate with the other. I couldn’t tell you why that appeals to me as an idea, as something to see before I die, but it does. While the fissure is around 60m (200ft) deep underwater, in my imagination, swimming through those waters would feel like Earth was opening up beneath me. The idea that there’s another world beneath us has a special kind of hold on humanity, one that’s almost as alluring as the idea that there’s life beyond Earth. The thing is, seismology is now in a place where it’s able to give us a detailed picture of what’s really going on deep inside the planet. And every time it does, our understanding of what it’s like down there changes. In this issue, we share what we've discovered.
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This (creepy) Roman skeleton offers first proof of a gladiator fighting a lion – and losing

Bite marks from a Roman skeleton found in England have revealed the first physical evidence that gladiators fought with big cats. The results were not pretty
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14 quick and simple ways to improve your teeth, according to dentists

The latest research shows our mouths are strongly tied to our overall health. Here are the top science-backed tips to help you brush up on your oral hygiene.
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Here’s the truth about your ‘digital dementia’ risk

New analysis shows that technology might provide cognitive benefits, despite bad press
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Why it’s time to rethink what happiness really means

Explaining exactly what's going on in our brains when we experience joy or pleasure remains frustratingly out of reach
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Sunscreen might have helped early humans outlive Neanderthals

In a time when auroras danced over most of the Earth and the sun’s rays were more powerful than today, sunscreen may have been Homo sapiens’ secret weapon
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