Issue # 322 _ December 2022
Cover
- Ethnographic museums reframe collections
- Institutions are establishing dialogues with Indigenous peoples, identifying new meanings behind their collections By Christina Queiroz
- History museums discover treasures in technical archives
- Artifacts from Candomblé places of worship and objects from everyday life are on display for the first time, offering renewed interpretations of society By Christina Queiroz
- Brazilian museums propose new curatorial approaches
- Advances in scientific knowledge push institutions to rethink curatorial proposals By Christina Queiroz
SCIENCE COMMUNICATION
Retracted scientific articles continue to be cited by other scientists as reliable sources
By Rodrigo de Oliveira AndradeSCIENTOMETRICS
Previously low-impact studies gained new attention in the pandemic and contributed to the fight against the novel coronavirus
By Rodrigo de Oliveira AndradeHealth
The falling cost of DNA sequencing and our increasing ability to interpret data are bringing genetic testing closer to clinical practice
DNA analysis is already being used to diagnose rare diseases and guide cancer treatment
By Ricardo ZorzettoArchaeology
Neanderthals were highly carnivorous
They lived in family groups and ate almost exclusively meat
By Guilherme ElerEcology
"Talking" turtles suggest acoustic communication arose more than 400 million years ago
By Giselle SoaresAGRICULTURE
Increasing soy productivity is essential to curbing deforestation
By Marcos Pivetta and Eduardo GeraqueScience
Pig farming has the biggest environmental footprint
Study determines the pressure placed on natural resources by food production worldwide
By Marcos PivettaPhysics
Exotic phase of matter could be useful in the development of quantum computers
Magnetic compound in a state known as spin liquid appears to be more stable than previously thought
By Marcos Pivetta