LinksDATE

In total there are 11254 links in this list. Showing results 10676-10700.

Trump administration considering suspending habeas corpus

The White House is "actively looking at" suspending the legal right to challenge detention.

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Gold is booming – but how safe is it for investors, really?

Trade wars and volatile markets have contributed to a gold rush, but investors shouldn't put all their eggs in this one basket, warn experts

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Mounjaro vs Wegovy: Weight-loss drugs in head-to-head trial

Scientists test Mounjaro and Wegovy - the big beasts of weight loss medication - to see which is best.

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Crates full of Nazi documents found in Argentine court's basement

The crates, dating back to 1941, contain Nazi party membership booklets and Nazi propaganda material.

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BBC's tense encounter with sanctioned Israeli settler while filming in West Bank

Israeli settler Moshe Sharvit established a so-called 'outpost' in occupied West Bank

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Spoan disease: Rare condition in Brazil town popular for cousin marriage

Many children in a Brazil town lost the ability to walk, so one scientist set about discovering why.

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Wild chimpanzees filmed using forest 'first aid'

The research builds on the discovery that chimps seek out and eat certain plants to self-medicate.

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Speeding duck: Switzerland traffic cameras catch flying mallard

Police say the mallard was likely a repeat offender and was caught in the same spot seven years ago.

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(1548) Brian Cox: The incomprehensible scales that rule the Universe - YouTube

"We are all in orbit around the center of the Milky Way galaxy. How big is this collection of stars? Somewhere between 200 and 400 billion suns in the Milky ...

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Why the mighty Himalayas are getting harder and harder to see

Severe air pollution is obscuring visibility of the highest mountain peaks on Earth, hitting tourism hard.

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Peter Sullivan: Man jailed for 1986 murder has conviction quashed

Peter Sullivan is believed to have suffered the longest miscarriage of justice involving a living prisoner in British legal history

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'I was drugged and raped by my husband for years'

A husband said he wanted a chat, then confessed to his wife he had been spiking her drinks and raping her.

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Harvard cut-price Magna Carta 'copy' now believed genuine

Harvard Law School paid just $27 for the document, which UK academics now think is the real thing.

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Eurovision: Meet the 'invisible' backstage team who make the song contest tick

Find out how Eurovision gets one act off the stage and another one in place in under a minute.

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(1556) We Have No Idea Why - YouTube

Check out our shiny new story-based merch at https://dftba.com/minuteearthMost animals on earth are bioluminescent, but almost all of them live in the ocean ...

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Is the US finally on track to build a high-speed rail network?

The US currently has no high-speed rail services, but two are under construction, and more planned.

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Chan Chan: Outrage as Peru archaeological site defaced

A video shared on social media shows a man spray painting an original wall of the pre-Columbian site.

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Why the French rarely say 'I love you'

It likely explains why the French have the reputation of being so demonstrative about love – because if you can't really say it, you have to show it.

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What happens when you think AI is lying about you?

BBC Tech Editor Zoe Kleinman tried to challenge the output of a chatbot - but all was not as it seemed.

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James Comey: Ex-FBI boss investigated for seashell photo seen as threat to Trump

Republicans allege James Comey's now-deleted "8647" Instagram message was a call to assassinate Donald Trump.

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The problem of thinking in straight lines

As we grow up, we are trained to think about things in a linear way. But it can leave us ill-equipped in our complex, fast moving world, harm our finances and even mislead AI.

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Decades-long mystery of ginger cats revealed

Researchers in Japan and US have unlocked the 60-year mystery of what gives cats their orange colour.

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xkcd: Modern

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What the ‘future histories’ of the 1920s can teach us about hope

When picturing humanity's future, dark visions are everywhere - but are there alternatives? Historian Thomas Moynihan explores what we can learn from forecasters 100 years ago.

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Witnessing the synchronised dance of a million starlings in Denmark

As the sun falls over a vast marshland, starlings undulate in mesmerising murmurations. But how, exactly, they do it remains mysterious.

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