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We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.
- 			 Life LifeTruffles aren’t laced with radioactive cesiumFallout from the Chernobyl disaster hasn’t made truffles dangerously radioactive, scientists find. 
- 			 Plants PlantsGenetic battle of the sexes plays out in cukes and melonsGenetics reveals new approach to preventing inbred seeds and encouraging more fruitful crops. By Susan Milius
- 			 Climate ClimateGeoengineering is world’s last hope, new book arguesGeoengineering is humankind’s only viable solution to curb climate change impacts, a journalist contends in The Planet Remade. 
- 			 Life Life‘Racing Extinction’ documents plight of endangered speciesThe new documentary "Racing Extinction" offers hope that people can halt the sixth mass extinction. 
- 			 Earth EarthEarth’s water originated close to home, lava analysis suggestsScarcity of a hydrogen isotope called deuterium in molten rock from Earth’s depths suggests that the planet’s H2O originated from water-logged dust during formation, not comets. 
- 			 Paleontology PaleontologyLand life spared in Permian extinction, geologists argueNew rock layer dating in South Africa’s Karoo Basin suggests that extinctions of land species didn’t coincide with the Permian extinction around 252 million years ago. 
- 			 Climate ClimateKangaroo farts may not be so eco-friendly after allKangaroos fart methane, but not much thanks to the metabolism of gut microbes 
- 			 Science & Society Science & SocietyQuantum spookiness, magnetic mysteries and more feedbackLetters and comments from readers on quantum spookiness, Earth's magnetic field, and more. 
- 			 Earth EarthNew recipe for diamonds: Just add acidRises in acidity during interactions between rocks and water in Earth’s interior can spark diamond formation, simulations show. 
- 			 Earth EarthNew recipe for diamonds: Just add acidSimulating the chemistry, pressures and temperatures in Earth’s interior, scientists have discovered a new way diamonds can form. 
- 			 Climate ClimateEocene temperature spike caused by half as much CO2 as once thoughtRevised experiments demonstrate that hot temperatures during the Eocene resulted from lower carbon dioxide concentrations than previously thought. 
- 			 Climate ClimateHow to melt an ice caveFrigid winter air keeps gives ice caves their perpetual chill, researchers find, warning that airtight seals on some ice caves could cause the frigid formations to melt within decades.