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{UAH} Fwd: Wild Science: Building a better athlete, Titanic in jeopardy, and more



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From: National Geographic <ng@e.nationalgeographic.com>
Date: 16 July 2018 20:27:02 BST
To: georgeokello_8@hotmail.com
Subject: Wild Science: Building a better athlete, Titanic in jeopardy, and more
Reply-To: National Geographic <emailfeedback@e.natgeo.com>

National Geographic | Wild Science
Meet a girl who gave her final days to science and visit an alien world with the right stuff for life.
 
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National Geographic
WILD SCIENCE
Amazing science stories that inform and inspire
       FOR OUR MEMBERS      
How Cutting-Edge Tech Is Helping Athletes Push the Limits
Over the last century, improvements in training, testing, technique, clothing, and equipment have helped athletes become better, faster, stronger, and more precise. But researchers believe we have not yet reached the limits of human possibility.

How far have we come in our quest to go faster, higher, and farther? And how can technology and new training methods help us push the limits of human performance? Find out in the July 2018 cover story of National Geographic magazine.
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       Animals      
New Hope for Nearly Extinct Species
Only two northern white rhinoceros are alive today. Could in-vitro fertilization offer them hope?
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       ARCHAEOLOGY      
Titanic Artifacts Caught in International Tug of War
For decades, a private company salvaged the doomed liner's debris—but now, it's bankrupt. What will happen to the priceless artifacts?
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Wild Photo
       NEWS      
This Alien Moon Has All the Right Stuff for Life
On Saturn's tiny moon Enceladus, perpetual fountains of alien seawater launch salt, silica, and even simple carbon compounds into the void. Now, scientists have found heavy organic compounds containing hundreds of atoms within this spritz. Enceladus may well be the best place besides Earth for life as we know it.
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FURTHER: Relive the Cassini Spacecraft's Amazing 'Grand Tour' of Saturn+
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Relive the space race with our 1964 preview of the Apollo moon missions.  ››
Earthquakes: Will we be able to predict the next "big one"?  ››
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3.3 MILLION
In years, the age of Selam—a toddler that belonged tothe species Australopithecus afarensis, a distant cousin of modern humans. Her remains are one-of-a-kind.
Foot of 'World's Oldest Child' Shows How Our Ancestors Moved+
       SCIENCE & INNOVATION      
Meet Lola, a Girl Who Gave Her Final Days to Science
"Iwasn't doing it for me. I was doing it for all the other kids who suffered."
READ HER STORY
       ENVIRONMENT      
Yellowstone's Iconic Birds Face 'Collapse.'
An invasive fish set off a domino effect that has already affected bears and elk. Now it threatens trumpeter swans and other birds.
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WILD VIDEO
       1:12 | SCIENCE & INNOVATION      
This Soft, Magnetic Robot May One Day Crawl Inside Your Body
This isn't a snowflake; it's a 3D-printed robot cradling a pill. Devices like this could one day deliver medicine or take tissue samples within people's bodies.
Watch the robot
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FURTHER: THIS WIGGLY FISH IS THE MOST ADVANCED ROBOT OF ITS KIND+
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'UNLUCKIEST' POMPEII VICTIM
REUNITE IMMIGRANT FAMILIES WITH DNA?
THE FIRST HORSE DENTISTS
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