¡¡ Answers emerging on COVID and smell loss > Surgen respuestas sobre COVID y pérdida de olor,... ¡¡.
¡¡ Answers emerging on COVID and smell loss > Surgen respuestas sobre COVID y pérdida de olor,... ¡¡.
[[[ ,...//,... Hemos tardado bien poco en dejar que nos importe gran cosa la guerra en Ucrania, pues luce el sol y la vida sin mascarilla invita a pensar en cosas más alegres. Nos conformamos con las imágenes de un nuevo tiroteo en Estados Unidos, que luego volveremos a ver versionado, aumentado y falsificado en una peli o serie.
Lo malo de tanto avance tecnológico desbocado, es que ha creado un monstruo insaciable que si aún no nos ha devorado es porque ha banalizado de tal manera todo cuanto toca, que ya nos importa un comino la dignidad humana o la que debería dignificar las artes y las ciencias, y a la que, antaño, ansiamos alcanzar y preservar por todos los medios.,...//,... "" ^La globalización nos ha metido en un barco que navega rumbo a la banalidad (msn.com)^. ]]].
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Hello Nature readers, | |||||
After a COVID-19 infection, some people have recovered their ability to perceive odours thanks to smell training. (Fabio Bucciarelli/The New York Times/eyevine) | |||||
Answers emerging on COVID and smell lossSmell disruption is becoming a less-common symptom of COVID-19 as the virus evolves, but given that more than half a billion cases of COVID-19 have been confirmed worldwide, tens of millions of people probably have lingering problems with their sense of smell. | |||||
UK scientists told Horizon grants cancelledThe United Kingdom is on the cusp of leaving the largest collaborative research programme in the world, Horizon Europe. On 8 June, some UK researchers who had already won Horizon funding received notice that their grants will be cancelled. On the same day, the UK science minister said in a speech that “we’re reaching a crunch point” in negotiations with the European Union that have delayed ratification of a Horizon deal. At issue is the complex political situation between the Republic of Ireland (which is still in the European Union) and Northern Ireland (which is not). The United Kingdom says it has an alternative solution to Horizon, called Plan B, but the details of how this would operate are unclear. Nature | 6 min read | |||||
‘Extinct’ Galápagos tortoise found aliveA single Fernandina Island Galápagos giant tortoise — a species thought to be extinct for 100 years — has been found. The female Chelonoidis phantasticus is only the second tortoise ever to be discovered on the island, after a single male, which was collected in 1906. Researchers have also found tortoise faeces on the island, which is uninhabited and difficult to access. “Our hope is that there are still a couple of other of these tortoises out there on the island,” says evolutionary genomicist Stephen Gaughran, who confirmed the match with the male museum specimen. “But most likely there aren’t very many of them.” New Scientist | 3 min readReference: Communications Biology paper | |||||
‘Fernanda’ was found in an isolated patch of vegetation, cut off from the main part of the island by several lava flows. Scientists estimate that she is well over 50 years old, but her growth is stunted. Fernanda is now in captivity at the Galápagos National Park Tortoise Center. (Lucas Bustamante/Galapagos Conservancy) | |||||
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Five best science books this weekAndrew Robinson’s pick of the top five science books to read this week includes the neuroscience of how we navigate, an alarming overview of Earth’s water crisis and a guide to making numbers really resonate. Nature | 3 min read | |||||
Futures: science fiction from NatureIn this week’s helping of short stories for Nature’s Futures series:
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Podcast: Best of the BriefingThis week’s Nature Podcast delves into some of the most fascinating stories recently featured in this very newsletter, including a ‘unicorn’ fossil that hints at the origins of giraffes’ long necks, a wave of researchers joining the ‘great resignation’ and how the Perseverance rover is kicking off a search for life on Mars. Nature Podcast | 18 min listenSubscribe to the Nature Podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts or Spotify. | |||||
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