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Added on the 15/09/2016 03:26:28 - Copyright : Reuters EN
Madrid, Jul 6 (EFE), (Camera: Raúl García Cabo) .- The Prado Museum reorganizes its 19th-century collection with a “more complex, rich and varied” proposal that increases the number of women, foreign authors, and new formats, in one of the "most ambitious" interventions undertaken by the art gallery in the last decade, according to its director Miguel Falomir.FOOTAGE OF THE NEW 19TH CENTURY COLLECTION OF THE PRADO MUSEUM IN MADRID.
Moscow, May 18 (EFE / EPA) .- (Camera: Sergei Ilnitsky) Thermometers in Moscow this Tuesday exceeded 30 degrees Celsius, breaking a temperature record registered at the end of the 19th century.FOOTAGE OF MOSCOW CITY.
Scientists working off the western coast of Mexico say they have discovered a new species of whale. According to CNN, the whales the researchers have discovered have been previously unknown. Three beaked whales were spotted in November by a team of scientists working near the San Benito Islands. Researchers initially set out to find out what kind of whales were making an unidentified acoustic signal. What they found were whales that had never been before and a sound has never been recorded before. The whales' physical characteristics suggest this is a new species, according to the team.
Rabat (Morocco), Oct 22 (EFE), (Camera: Fatima Zohra Bouaziz).- The Museum of History and Civilizations of Rabat currently hosts and until January 2021 a historical and archaeological exhibition that portrays Morocco from the Paleolithic to the late nineteenth century. FOOTAGE OF THE EXHIBITION IN RABAT.
The late, great French biologist Louis Pasteur once said, 'Chance favors the prepared mind.' A group of Dutch cancer scientists says they've discovered a pair of salivary glands that absolutely no one had ever noticed before. CNN reports the glands are hidden away in the skull, where the nasal cavity and the throat meet. The cancer researchers first came across the body part during a scan designed to look for tumorous growths. The 'unknown entity' cannot be seen on X-rays, or in ultrasound, MRI scans, or PET scans. Rather, the glands can only be seen in a new, highly advanced type of scan called PSMA PET/CT The scientists, from the Netherlands Cancer Institute, propose naming them 'tubarial glands.'