Papua accounted for 93% of Indonesia’s 527,000 malaria cases in 2024, as elimination efforts continue to face multiple challenges—including local perceptions that normalize malaria as an ordinary illness, emphasizing the need for more effective…
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Ending malaria in Papua: Why oral communication matters as much as medicine
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Is the Microbial Mystery of What Killed Napoleon I’s Army Solved?
Napoleon I led an army of around 550,000 soldiers to invade Russia in June 1812, and though they made it to Moscow, they did so without achieving a decisive victory. The army was faced with a destroyed city,…
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Is the Microbial Mystery of What Killed Napoleon I’s Army Solved?
Napoleon I led an army of around 550,000 soldiers to invade Russia in June 1812, and though they made it to Moscow, they did so without achieving a decisive victory. The army was faced with a destroyed city,…
Continue Reading
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Is the Microbial Mystery of What Killed Napoleon I’s Army Solved?
Napoleon I led an army of around 550,000 soldiers to invade Russia in June 1812, and though they made it to Moscow, they did so without achieving a decisive victory. The army was faced with a destroyed city,…
Continue Reading
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The forest’s future tense: What might lie ahead for the tropics (commentary)
Heading into COP30, where tropical forests are set to be a central theme, it seemed worth attempting a thought experiment: to trace today’s trajectories a little further forward and imagine where they might lead. What follows are a series of…
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Archaeologists Discover the World’s Oldest Paintings—Made Long Before Humans Existed, and Eerily Sophisticated
A series of newly analyzed cave paintings—some dated to 65,000 years ago—are forcing archaeologists to reexamine long-standing assumptions about the origins of symbolic behavior and who first practiced it. Found in hidden caves across…
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Meet Point Nemo, where the International Space Station will die in 2030
The International Space Station just notched a major milestone, but its days are numbered.
Sunday (Nov. 2) marked the 25th anniversary of continuous human occupation of the International Space Station (ISS), which has carved out a spot in the…
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Elite Athletes Are Only Human, And Scientists Have Found Their Limit : ScienceAlert
Elite athletes can push their bodies to the very limit, but even they can’t surpass the boundaries of human nature, according to new research.
Scientists have found yet more evidence that, regardless of a person’s fitness or training, the…
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Adenotonsillectomy improves sleep architecture, respiratory outcomes in pediatric obstructive sleep apnea
For pediatric obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), adenotonsillectomy (T&A) significantly improves sleep architecture and respiratory outcomes, according to a study published online Oct. 24 in Laryngoscope.
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Six ways to give your dog a richer life, from 'sniffaris' to sensory gardens
While we are captivated by a vivid sunset and breathtaking views, dogs have their noses to the ground, reading the odor stories left behind by other dogs and animals. The pile of crinkling autumn leaves that gathers the smells of passers-by…
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