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| The terrifying reality of actually living on Mars Elon Musk hopes to have a metropolis a million earthlings strong on Mars by mid-century, complete with everything from factories to breweries. But before anyone can swill down a Martian IPA, we'll first have to deal with the myriad ways the red planet can kill ... | |
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| GrillGun gas torch lights up your grill in seconds Bring lots of heat to your charcoal in seconds with the GrillGun. Tyler Lizenby/CNET. Cooking with charcoal grills takes plenty of time and patience. One big delay before you can cook: waiting around for your coals to fully ignite. The $140 GrillBlazer GrillGun ... | |
| What life is like inside Milan amid Italy's coronavirus epidemic Shireen Gorgin Botura, 30, and Matt Botura, 29, American students living in Italy for two years and working as English teachers, tell The Post's Sara Dorn about the dramatic changes to daily life in Milan — and how some Italians refuse to change their social ... | |
| Space Photos of the Week: Perfectly Safe Celestial Coronas You know where you're not going to catch the coronavirus? Space, that's where. But you will catch a glimpse of beautiful halos around the sun and other celestial bodies. The word "corona" has Latin roots, meaning essentially "crown." The solar corona is the ... | |
| Chlamydia cousin discovered in deep Arctic Ocean Deep under the Arctic Ocean seafloor lurks several newfound species of chlamydia bacteria. The species, cousins to the one that causes the sexually transmitted infection (STI), seem to survive despite a lack of oxygen and obvious hosts to prey upon, new ... | |
| SpaceX Successfully Lands 50th Rocket In 5 Years SpaceX launched another cargo mission to the International Space Station Friday, successfully landing the flight's rocket booster for the 50th time in the last five years, the Associated Press reported. The commercial rocket company sent its "Dragon" capsule ... | |
| A new minimoon was found orbiting earth. There will be more. Earth gets a new moon most months, but last month, we got two. About 4 a.m. on Feb. 15 at the Mount Lemmon Observatory, 9,000 feet above Tucson, Arizona, two astronomers from the Catalina Sky Survey, Kacper Wierzchos and Theodore Pruyne, watched ... | |
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