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Pinned December 22, 2016

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After Math: Weird science
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After Math: Weird science

Andrew Tarantola, @terrortola

December 04, 2016
 

Universal Studios / Weird Science

It’s been a strange week for the scientific arts. The speed of light might not be as stable as we thought, carbon nanotubes have been used to freeze boiling water, a bunch of schoolkids recreated a $750 compound for $25 and the House Committee on Science, Space and Technology has decided that it doesn’t believe in climate change. Numbers, because how else will we know how fast the Earth is warming?

Gallery: After Math: Weird Science | 7 Photos

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Andrew Tarantola has lived in San Francisco since 1982 and has been writing clever things about technology since 2011. When not arguing the finer points of portable vaporizers and military defense systems with strangers on the Internet, he enjoys tooling around his garden, knitting, and binge watching anime.

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