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Lost your sense of smell? It may not be coronavirus.
Lost your sense of smell? It may not be coronavirus.April 07, 2020 – Some have touted the symptom as a sign of COVID-19—but scientists have limited, inconclusive data in hand.
Will warming spring temperatures slow the coronavirus outbreak?
Will warming spring temperatures slow the coronavirus outbreak?March 06, 2020 – Flu season generally subsides in April and March, but will the coronavirus go with it? Past coronavirus outbreaks can offer clues.
Why some people are more vulnerable to catching coronavirus
Why some people are more vulnerable to catching coronavirusMarch 13, 2020 – For certain professions and communities, public health recommendations are difficult, if not impossible, to follow.
What 'airborne coronavirus' means, and how to protect yourself
What 'airborne coronavirus' means, and how to protect yourselfAugust 11, 2020 – The COVID-19 pandemic has revived a decades-old debate about how respiratory diseases travel—which affects the safety practices experts recommend.
Here’s what coronavirus does to the body
Here’s what coronavirus does to the bodyFebruary 18, 2020 – From blood storms to honeycomb lungs, here’s an organ-by-organ look at how COVID-19 harms humans.
How long does the coronavirus last inside the body?
How long does the coronavirus last inside the body?June 03, 2020 – Researchers are narrowing down how long the virus persists inside the body and whether people can be quickly re-infected.
Why some coronavirus variants are more contagious—and how we can stop them
Why some coronavirus variants are more contagious—and how we can stop themJanuary 27, 2021 – A cluster of viral mutations seems to be speeding the spread of COVID-19—and scientists are racing to understand how they work.
Fauci: No scientific evidence the coronavirus was made in a Chinese lab
Fauci: No scientific evidence the coronavirus was made in a Chinese labMay 05, 2020 – In an exclusive interview, the face of America’s COVID-19 response cautions against the rush for states to reopen, and offers his tips for handling the pandemic's information deluge.
What you should know about experimental therapies for coronavirus
What you should know about experimental therapies for coronavirusApril 28, 2020 – Antivirals and blood therapy sound promising, but how do they work, and when will we know if they truly treat COVID-19?
First coronavirus deaths reported in indigenous communities in the Amazon
First coronavirus deaths reported in indigenous communities in the AmazonApril 11, 2020 – “COVID-19 has fertile terrain to spread rapidly among the populations that live in Amazonia,” says president of prominent Brazilian rights group.
Wildlife abounds in these places abandoned years before coronavirus
Wildlife abounds in these places abandoned years before coronavirusApril 30, 2020 – Studies of Korea’s DMZ and exclusion zones around the Chernobyl and Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plants show how animals respond when humans flee.
Trespassing, vandalism abound in national parks affected by coronavirus
Trespassing, vandalism abound in national parks affected by coronavirusApril 08, 2020 – As the pandemic closes many sites, some visitors test the limits—while staff and local businesses try to cope.
A new battle zone for the coronavirus looms: the developing world
A new battle zone for the coronavirus looms: the developing worldApril 06, 2020 – People in Mandalay, Myanmar’s second-largest city, are coming together in the face of a possible catastrophe.
Early coronavirus actions appear to be working in Washington state
Early coronavirus actions appear to be working in Washington stateApril 10, 2020 – The rate of rise in new cases is slowing in Washington, but officials stress they’re not out of the woods yet and social distancing remains in place.
These charts show how coronavirus has ‘quieted’ the world
These charts show how coronavirus has ‘quieted’ the worldApril 08, 2020 – As people stopped commuting and traveling, the Earth’s surface vibrated less—and seismologists tracked the change.
Coronavirus gets dangerously close to isolated ‘Arrow People’ in Amazon
Coronavirus gets dangerously close to isolated ‘Arrow People’ in AmazonAugust 18, 2020 – Advocates warn of genocide as Brazil's Supreme Court moves to protect Indigenous territories.
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