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exclusive interview with Dr Mike Yeadon

Written by dailyexpose.co.uk

Image: Twitter

Dr Yeadon, a former vice-president and chief scientific officer of the Allergy and Respiratory department at Pfizer, who has also provided a simple explanation of why lockdowns could never have worked, went on to explain that there is “zero” chance of incessantly reported new variants escaping immunity.

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Interstellar probe planned to travel out to 1000AU

Written by gizmodo.com

Image: Johns Hopkins / APL

Four years in the making, a pragmatic mission concept for an interstellar probe would go beyond the Voyager Interstellar Mission, in which two spacecraft left Earth in the 1970s and are now the most distant human-made objects. The team behind the project detailed their proposal today at the annual general assembly of the European Geosciences Union.

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NASA’s Future War 2025

Written by druidstheater

Image: PNG Egg

Just look at us. Everything is backwards, everything is upside down. Doctors destroy health, lawyers destroy justice, psychiatrists destroy minds, scientists destroy truth, major media destroys information, religions destroy spirituality and governments destroy freedom. ― Michael Ellner.

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Meet Zhurong: China names Mars rover after fire god

Written by space.com

Image: CNSA/CLEP

China has named its first-ever Mars rover “Zhurong” after an ancient fire god ahead of a landing attempt on the Red Planet in May. The China National Space Administration (CNSA) revealed the name at the sixth China Space Day held in Nanjing on Saturday (April 24).

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Scientists Find New Jurassic Reptile that Looks Like a Pokémon

Written by vice.com

Image: Zhao Chuang

Scientists have discovered fossils of a new pterosaur species that lived in what is now northern China during the Jurassic period. And they are pretty adorable animals. Pterosaurs lived on Earth during the Mesozoic era (about 252 million to 66 million years ago). They were the first reptiles that could fly, with sizes ranging from that of a sparrow to as big as a giraffe.

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Little Foot: a Step Closer in Understanding Human Evolution

Written by usc.edu

 

Image: Paul John Myburgh, Courtesy of the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa

The USC-led study examined the shoulder assembly of Little Foot, an Australopithecus that lived more than 3 million years ago, and may have confirmed how our human ancestors used their arms.

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