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How letters journey through your brain

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8/25/19

Welcome to the new Science News website

We’ve rebuilt our site from top to bottom, from a new design to an entirely new publishing platform, with the goal of giving you a much better experience.
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India’s Skeleton Lake contains the bones of mysterious European migrants

Not all of the hundreds of skeletons found at a north Indian lake are from the same place or period. What killed any of these people is still unknown.
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Climate misinformation may be thriving on YouTube, a social scientist warns

Analyzing 200 climate-related videos on YouTube shows that a majority challenge widely accepted views about climate change and climate engineering.
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Big and bold wasp queens may create more successful colonies

A paper wasp queen’s personality and body size could help predict whether the nest she has founded will thrive.
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Imaging scans show where symbols turn to letters in the brain

Scientists watched brain activity in a region where reading takes root, and saw a hierarchy of areas that give symbols both sound and meaning.
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Vaping may have sent 153 people to hospitals with severe lung injuries

The CDC says it is looking into the cases, most of which involve adolescents and young adults.
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For an asteroid, Ryugu has surprisingly little dust on its surface

Ryugu lacks the dust that some other space rocks have. The near-Earth asteroid may hide the fine debris inside porous rocks or eject it into space.
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Climate change may make El Niño and La Niña less predictable

Atlantic Niñas and Niños have been fairly reliable bellwethers for severe El Niño and La Niña events in the Pacific. A warming world may change that.
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Quantum physicists have teleported ‘qutrits’ for the first time

The technique could be useful for creating a future quantum internet.
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Why one biologist chases hurricanes to study spider evolution

Don’t just sit there. If you really want to bring scientific rigor to studying evolution and spider aggression, drive into a hurricane.
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