"Researchers studying Yellowstone's depths discovered that small earthquakes can recharge underground microbial life. The quakes exposed new rock and fluids, creating bursts of chemical energy that microbes can use. Both the water chemistry and the microbial communities shifted dramatically in response. This dynamic may help explain how life survives in deep, dark environments." |
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The 2025 market is a rollercoaster: tariffs are imposed, then paused, then reimposed. Tech stocks like Apple and Nvidia surge one day and slump the next. The Dow swings by hundreds of points in a single session. Sterling Stock Picker cuts through this chaos. With AI-driven insights and real-time guidance, it helps you make informed decisions, whether to buy, sell, or hold. No more guesswork — just a clear strategy tailored to your goals. Save with code STOCKS20. [Ad] |
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"A new residential skyscraper has set a North American record, becoming the tallest building in Canada — and it's not even finished yet. Named the Pinnacle SkyTower, it will rise to an impressive supertall height of 351.85 m (1,154 ft) in Toronto once complete. Designed by Hariri Pontarini Architects, the skyscraper currently sits at 100 floors and will eventually reach 106. The height milestone surpasses the recent One Bloor West tower, by Foster and Partners, which held the 'Canada's tallest building' bragging rights for just a few short months." |
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"Pelvic floors are not a part of the body that I grew up hearing about. And it wasn't terribly long before my own pelvic floor episode that I learned we've all got one — old people, children, women, men. Most people's familiarity with pelvic floor activity extends only as far as 'Kegels,' a semimystical gripping motion that women are encouraged to practice in order to be good at sex, and more wrongly, to get a baby out of one's birth canal. But Kegels only capture one small aspect of what the pelvic floor is capable of." |
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Look, you just learned your pelvic floor exists. Congrats! Now it's time to treat it like the powerhouse it is. We-Vibe's Black Friday sale is here to help with up to 65% off some of the most raved-about pleasure tech on the internet. Think targeted stimulation, ergonomic wizardry, and vibes so precise your nervous system might cry a little. It's the holiday season — give your pelvic floor something to celebrate. [Ad] |
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"The year is 2078. You are a humble server, tasked with beaming soups to the hungry humans upstairs. Rather than cook, your job is to decide what counts as soup, because your soup is cooked by aliens, and they are getting confused. Batteries swimming in a thick liquid — is that soup? What about mussels and a pile of rocks served with an ice cream scooper? This is the entire premise of the interactive game Something Something Soup Something. If you hit the 'soup' button, your soup will be beamed upstairs. If you press 'not soup,' the substance will be whisked into a dumpster. Yet this seemingly simple task quickly becomes a series of philosophical quandaries." |
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