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COVID surge: Sarasota Memorial Hospital sees uptick in mostly unvaccinated
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Emergency use, full approval why FDA considers COVID-19 vaccine safe
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They Waited, They Worried, They Stalled This Week, They Got the Shot
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Revealed: 2,000-Plus-Year-Old Man’s Last Meal
by Nora McGreevy/Smithsonianmag.com
Many questions about Tollund Man arguably the most famous of Europe’s “bog bodies” remain unanswered. Killed more than 2,000 years ago, the Iron Age man was buried in a peat bog that naturally preserved his body. The exact circumstances of his death remain unclear, but experts “tend to agree that [his] killing was some kind of ritual sacrifice to the gods,” wrote Joshua Levine for
What scientists do know for certain are the precise contents of Tollund Man’s last meal: porridge and fish. As Elizabeth Djinis reports for
Fire, floods, dead fish: Climate change fuels extreme weather, with no âreturn to normal.â
The sky in Denver was hazy from wildfires on Tuesday as children cooled down in a fountain. Credit.David Zalubowski/Associated Press
A summer of misery stretched across much of the United States this week, with flash floods in the Southeast, deadly monsoons in the desert, a crackling-dry fire season across the Pacific Northwest and hazy skies on the East Coast blotting out a baleful red sun.
Parts of Montana reached 110 degrees this week â more than 20 degrees above normal â while the nationâs largest wildfire continued to explode in southern Oregon, generating its own weather and prompting state officials to warn residents that they face a long and difficult fire season.