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In Phytoremediation, Plants Extract Toxins from Soils

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Plus: Do Sunspots Explain Global Recession, War, or Famine? | daily@jstor.org | | ©2004-2020 ITHA

Plus: Do Sunspots Explain Global Recession, War, or Famine? [] To ensure delivery of your JSTOR Daily please add daily@jstor.org to your address book. [] Weekly Digest [Web Version](357ce/ct0_0/1/m?sid=TV2%3AE2Bqip1qD) [] 357ce/ct1_0/1/l?sid=TV2%3AE2Bqip1qD [] [In Phytoremediation, Plants Extract Toxins from Soils](357ce/ct1_1/1/l?sid=TV2%3AE2Bqip1qD) [] By Sophia La Banca [] Imagine a field contaminated by an oil spill. The toxins have reached deposits of water, and fumes have overtaken the air. Unfortunately, situations like these are common all over the world, presenting hazards to both the environment and to human health. Cleaning up such toxic sites can be very expensive and dangerous, but in the last three decades, researchers have been working on a new technique: letting plants do the work for us. [] [Read More](357ce/ct1_2/1/l?sid=TV2%3AE2Bqip1qD) [] [] 357ce/ct2_0/1/l?sid=TV2%3AE2Bqip1qD [] [How Yellowstone Extremophile Bacteria Helped With Covid-19 Testing](357ce/ct2_1/1/l?sid=TV2%3AE2Bqip1qD) [] By Lina Zeldovich [] The heat-resistant enzyme from Thermus aquaticus is used in PCR testing to detect pathogens. [Read more...](357ce/ct2_2/1/l?sid=TV2%3AE2Bqip1qD) [] [] 357ce/ct3_0/1/l?sid=TV2%3AE2Bqip1qD [] [Do Sunspots Explain Global Recession, War, or Famine?](357ce/ct3_1/1/l?sid=TV2%3AE2Bqip1qD) [] By Alex Langstaff [] Maybe it's something about the number eleven? [Read more...](357ce/ct3_2/1/l?sid=TV2%3AE2Bqip1qD) [] [] 357ce/ct4_0/1/l?sid=TV2%3AE2Bqip1qD [] [The Mockumentary: A Very Real History](357ce/ct4_1/1/l?sid=TV2%3AE2Bqip1qD) [] By Ashawnta Jackson [] What's the appeal of humor masquerading as seriousness? An entire movie genre stands ready to shed light on that question. [Read more...](357ce/ct4_2/1/l?sid=TV2%3AE2Bqip1qD) [] [] ADVERTISEMENT [] Whether you're a new or longtime JSTOR Daily reader, we invite you to be a part of our future. Join our membership today—even $3 a month would mean so much. [Become a member.](357ce/ct5_0/1/l?sid=TV2%3AE2Bqip1qD) [] [] 357ce/ct6_0/1/l?sid=TV2%3AE2Bqip1qD [] [Bringing France Back into American History](357ce/ct6_1/1/l?sid=TV2%3AE2Bqip1qD) [] By Matthew Wills [] The current arrangement of nation-states in North America has made the role of the French in colonial history seem less important. [Read more...](357ce/ct6_2/1/l?sid=TV2%3AE2Bqip1qD) [] [] 357ce/ct7_0/1/l?sid=TV2%3AE2Bqip1qD [] [The Horseshoe Crab: Same as It Ever Was?](357ce/ct7_1/1/l?sid=TV2%3AE2Bqip1qD) [] By Jess Romeo [] The seemingly static appearance of these ancient-looking arthropods presents a challenge for scientists who want to study their evolutionary history. [Read more...](357ce/ct7_2/1/l?sid=TV2%3AE2Bqip1qD) [] [] 357ce/ct8_0/1/l?sid=TV2%3AE2Bqip1qD [] [The Bizarre Theories of the American School of Evolution](357ce/ct8_1/1/l?sid=TV2%3AE2Bqip1qD) [] By Livia Gershon [] The paleontologist Edward Drinker Cope condemned women's suffrage and Black Americans through an evolutionary lens. [Read more...](357ce/ct8_2/1/l?sid=TV2%3AE2Bqip1qD) [] [] [] Contact Us 101 Greenwich Street, New York, NY 10006, USA [daily.jstor.org](357ce/ct9_0/1/l?sid=TV2%3AE2Bqip1qD) | daily@jstor.org | [@JSTOR_Daily](357ce/ct10_0/1/l?sid=TV2%3AE2Bqip1qD) | [Facebook](357ce/ct11_0/1/l?sid=TV2%3AE2Bqip1qD) ©2004-2020 ITHAKA. All Rights Reserved. JSTOR®, the JSTOR logo, and ITHAKA® are registered trademarks of ITHAKA. Interested in advertising with JSTOR Daily? [Contact us](357ce/ct12_0/1/l?sid=TV2%3AE2Bqip1qD). If you prefer not to receive email messages from JSTOR Daily in the future, you may [unsubscribe here](357ce/ct13_0/1/l?sid=TV2%3AE2Bqip1qD).

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