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  1. An image of a microscopic diatom which has a hard porous cell wall on a black background.
    Microbes

    Watch: Recent microbial discoveries are changing our view of life on Earth

    Videos capture the strange movements and predatory styles of protists — among the closest microbial cousins to multicellular life.

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  2. A photo of a variety of different colored textiles with adinkras, used in Ghana's Twi language to express proverbs, stamped in black ink.
    Math

    Non-Western art and design can reveal alternate ways of thinking about math

    Focusing on the relationship between math and culture can boost student learning and expand mathematical knowledge, researchers say.

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  3. An image of the most energetic pulsar radiation from the Vela pulsar.
    Physics

    Vela’s exploded star is the highest-energy pulsar ever seen

    A spinning dead star about 1,000 light-years away, in the constellation Vela, raises questions about how pulsars can emit such extreme radiation.

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  4. A photo of human footprints in White Sands National Park in New Mexico.
    Archaeology

    Human footprints in New Mexico really may be surprisingly ancient, new dating shows

    Two dating methods find that human tracks in White Sands National Park in New Mexico are roughly 22,000 years old, aligning with a previous estimate.

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  5. An image of HIV particles seen in yellow replicating from an infected T cell seen in pink.
    Health & Medicine

    ‘Dormant’ HIV has ongoing skirmishes with the body’s immune system

    In people on HIV drugs, defective viral bits may still exhaust T cells, possibly making it harder to fight back if people go off the drugs.

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  6. A photo of a hippo's head popping out of the water with its mouth wide open.
    Life

    Hippos might be ferocious fighters, but their big teeth make them terrible chewers

    Among plant eaters, hippos are the worst chewers. Their huge tusks and front teeth keep the jaw from moving side to side to grind food, a study finds.

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  7. Liquids in 7 vials glow different colors thanks to infusions of quantum dots of different sizes.
    Chemistry

    The development of quantum dots wins the 2023 Nobel prize in chemistry

    Moungi Bawendi, Louis Brus and Alexei Ekimov split the prize for their work in creating nanoparticles whose properties depend on their size.

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  8. One Morona-Santiago stubfoot toad sits on a rock, while another sits on the back of the first toad. The toads have brown and green coloration and yellow eyes.
    Animals

    A global report finds amphibians are still in peril. But it’s not all bad news

    A survey of about 8,000 amphibian species provides the latest update on extinction risk trends stretching back to 1980.

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  9. A photo of a green laser beam being sent through several pieces of glass.
    Physics

    Technique to see the ultrafast world of electrons wins 2023 physics Nobel

    Physicists Pierre Agostini, Ferenc Krausz and Anne L’Huillier won for work creating light bursts that last billionths of a billionth of a second.

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  10. A photo of two baby pied tamarins lying on the back of an adult pied tamarin in a tree.
    Animals

    In noisy environs, pied tamarins are using smell more often to communicate

    Groups of the primate, native to Brazil, complement vocalizations with scent-marking behavior to alert other tamarins to dangers in their urban home.

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  11. Plants

    The first citrus fruits may have come from southern China

    An in-depth look at the orange family tree shows the oldest Citrus ancestors arrived in Asia on the Indian tectonic plate over 25 million years ago.

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  12. illustration of a messenger RNA molecule covered in lipid bubbles
    Health & Medicine

    Early mRNA research that led to COVID-19 vaccines wins 2023 medicine Nobel Prize

    Biochemists Katalin Karikó and Drew Weissman devised mRNA modifications to make vaccines that trigger good immune responses instead of harmful ones.

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