Wayback Machine
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COLLECTED BY
Organization: National Library of Medicine
National Library of Medicine

Archive-It Partner Since: Mar, 2009
Organization Type: National Institutions
Organization URL:http://www.nlm.nih.gov

The National Library of Medicine (NLM), the world's largest medical library and a component of the National Institutes of Health, collects, preserves, and makes available to the public information about health, medicine, and the biomedical sciences. To continue fulfilling this mission, NLM is collecting and archiving related Web content, which also serves to document the histories of health and medicine.

Collection: Sexual and Gender Minority Health web archive
A selective collection of web resources archived by the National Library of Medicine beginning in 2024 related to Sexual and Gender Minority health, including health disparities and health resources for the LGBTQ+ community. This collection includes federal government websites, organizational and advocacy websites, websites of leading gender-affirming clinics in the U.S., and other personal narratives. Archived websites are primarily in English. NLM will continue to develop, review, describe, and add content to the collection. The web archive is being developed in collaboration with the NIH Sexual and Gender Minority Research Office.
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The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20250107144514/http://www.bing.com/

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Moeraki Boulders at sunset, South Island, New Zealand

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Rocks and rollers

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Rocks and rollers

© Douglas Pearson/eStock Photo
Are you ready to rock the new year? Today is Old Rock Day, a day for celebrating and learning about old rocks and fossils. Rocks are common and few of us take the time to consider how amazing they are. But forged in volcanoes or molded by millennia of pressure, these solid masses of minerals hold the key to understanding how our planet formed. Rocks can also contain fossils, the remnants of long-extinct organisms, which give scientists clues about what creatures and plants have lived on Earth during its 4.5-billion-year history.
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