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We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.
- 			 Science & Society Science & SocietyThe Smithsonian’s ‘Deep Time’ exhibit gives dinosaurs new lifeThe Smithsonian’s renovated fossil hall puts ancient dinosaurs and other creatures in context. 
- 			 Environment EnvironmentHow one fern hoards toxic arsenic in its fronds and doesn’t dieTo survive high levels of arsenic, a fern sequesters the heavy metal in its shoots with the help of three proteins. 
- 			 Climate ClimateThe Southern Ocean may be less of a carbon sink than we thoughtThe Southern Ocean’s ability to suck up much of the carbon that humans pump into the atmosphere is in question. 
- 			 Climate ClimateThousands of birds perished in the Bering Sea. Arctic warming may be to blameA mass die-off of puffins and other seabirds in the Bering Sea is probably linked to climate change, scientists say. 
- 			 Climate ClimateHimalayan glacier melting threatens water security for millions of peopleAsia’s glaciers are melting faster than they are accumulating new stores of snow and ice. 
- 			 Earth EarthThis iconic Humboldt map may need crucial updatesA seminal, 212-year-old diagram of Andean plants by German explorer Alexander von Humboldt is still groundbreaking — but outdated, researchers say. 
- 			 Environment EnvironmentEmissions of a banned ozone-destroying chemical have been traced to ChinaSince 2013, eastern China has increased its annual emissions of a banned chlorofluorocarbon by about 7,000 metric tons, a study finds. 
- 			 Earth EarthOnly a third of Earth’s longest rivers still run freeMapping millions of kilometers of waterways shows that just 37 percent of rivers longer than 1,000 kilometers remain unchained by human activities. 
- 			 Archaeology ArchaeologyAncient South American populations dipped due to an erratic climateScientists link bouts of intense rainfall and drought around 8,600 to 6,000 years ago to declining numbers of South American hunter-gatherers. By Bruce Bower
- 			 Life Life1 million species are under threat. Here are 5 ways we speed up extinctionsOne million of the world’s plant and animal species are now under threat of extinction, a new report finds. 
- 			 Earth EarthThe search for new geologic sources of lithium could power a clean futureFuturistic clean-energy visions of electric vehicles are driving the hunt for lithium. 
- 			 Earth EarthA belly full of wriggling worms makes wood beetles better recyclersCommon beetles that eat rotten logs chew up more wood when filled with a roundworm larvae, releasing nutrients more quickly back to the forest floor.