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Playing spot the difference with the new Range Rover is a surprisingly tricky game. Yes, the vertically stacked rear lights are a giveaway, but you really need to be holding a picture of the old ...
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The Chairman of Progressive Governors Forum (PGF) and governor of Imo State, Hope Uzodinma, yesterday urged his colleagues, other elected officials and chieftains to embark on aggressive marketing ...
These are the largest organic molecules discovered on Mars to date. They were detected in a drilled rock sample called “Cumberland” that was analyzed by the Sample Analysis at Mars lab inside the ...
The Land Rover Defender Octa was unveiled last year. It is the flagship model and gets a 4.4-litre twin-turbo V8 petrol engine putting out 635 PS. The exterior gets multiple design and changes ...
When this category first popped up on the market, I remember not being impressed. But over time, things have gotten a lot better. Wild deodorant is something that rose to the challenge. All ...
Is the Range Rover Sport a good car? The third-generation Range Rover Sport delivers exactly what luxury SUV buyers are looking for. Smarter styling, improved onboard technology, along with a ...
The rock has hundreds of spherules on it, some of which have tiny pinholes. NASA's Perseverance rover has encountered another rock on Mars that has left scientists puzzled. Named "St. Pauls Bay ...
In 2013, the Curiosity rover drilled this hole, which measures about 0.6 inches wide and 2.6 inches deep, into martian rock. The sample is now thought to contain long-chain organic molecules.
They were found by NASA's Curiosity rover when it drilled into a sample of mudstone from a rock nicknamed 'Cumberland', in the Yellowknife Bay region of Mars' Gale crater, all the way back in 2013.
Buried within a 3.7-billion-year-old rock sample, the largest organic compounds ever found on Mars have been uncovered by NASA’s Curiosity rover—a six-wheeled lone explorer traversing the planet.
Our recent study, published in the Journal of Environmental Psychology, outlines the mental wellbeing benefits of wild swimming, and suggests that satisfying psychological needs might underlie this.
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