| World's third-largest dam gets the go-ahead 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-4-22 2:07) | 
  | A decades-long tug of war between environmental and indigenous groups on one hand and the Brazilian government on the other has come to a close 
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  | Today on New Scientist: 21 April 2010 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-4-22 2:00) | 
  | All today's stories on newscientist.com at a glance, including: why the tropics are hotbeds of evolution, how to keep track of our nuclear fuel stockpiles, and why brain training may be a waste of time 
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  | Self-starter: Life got going all on its own 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-4-22 2:00) | 
  | Given the right chemical ingredients, self-replication and the genetic code were all but inevitable 
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  | Living world: Why the tropics are hotbeds of evolution 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-4-22 2:00) | 
  | The tropics are home to far more species than cooler climes. What makes them so lush? 
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  | Bacterial mat the size of Greece found on Pacific floor 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-4-21 23:59) | 
  | The Census of Marine Life is forcing a radical reassessment of how many species there are on Earth 
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  | Can we keep tabs on stockpiles of nuclear fuel? 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-4-21 22:41) | 
  | To keep fissile materials from falling into the wrong hands, governments need to turn to safer reactor fuels and smarter detection technology 
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  | Early humans may have bred with other species– twice 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-4-21 20:50) | 
  | New genetic evidence suggests that early humans mated with other species, but was it the Neanderthals or someone else entirely, asks Ewen Callaway 
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  | UK election: 'You look like a mad scientist!' 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-4-21 20:34) | 
  | The Science Party is in the electoral race and on the streets meeting voters, says British parliamentary candidate Michael Brooks 
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  | Zoologger: Keep freeloaders happy with rotting corpses 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-4-21 20:25) | 
  | Pretty name, not-so-pretty domestic arrangements: the golden orb-weaving spider has the unpleasant habit of weaving rotting insects into its web 
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  | Quantum broadband becomes reality 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-4-20 18:52) | 
  | The first high-speed network link that is so secure it is theoretically unbreakable has been created, thanks to quantum physics 
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