The Economist -
1 Mar 2018 17:44

Down desolation road IT DOES not rain much in the Atacama desert. A 1,000km strip of land running along the Chilean coast, it is Earth's driest desert outside its poles. Average annual rainfall in certain parts can be as low as a millimetre or two a year, and some Atacaman weather stations have never seen a drop of water. Yet it does rain occasionally. And as Dirk Schulze-Makuch, an astrobiologist at the Technical University of Berlin, and his colleagues report in Proceedings of the National Aca...
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