The Brutalist Report - science
- No new articles in the last 24 hours.
- Respected snake researcher dies from rattlesnake bite [980d]
- Do videos show ivory-billed woodpecker, or is it extinct? [980d]
- Overcoming a major manufacturing constraint [980d]
- Bug eyes and bat sonar: Bioengineers turn to animal kingdom for creation of bionic super 3D cameras [980d]
- Optical microscope strategy allows observers to check electrons moving inside gold [981d]
- How monsoon winds impact climate change by transporting pollutants into the upper atmosphere [981d]
- A review article clarifies genotype-independent plant transformation [981d]
- A simple way of sculpting matter into complex shapes [981d]
- Parasitic behavior of the root-knot nematode is negatively regulated by root-derived volatiles of C. metuliferus [981d]
- New radiolabeling method for personalized cancer treatment [981d]
- Antarctica's ice shelves could be melting faster than we thought [981d]
- Matter at extreme conditions of very high temperature and pressure turns out to be remarkably simple and universal [981d]
- A fresh look into grasslands as carbon sinks [981d]
- Researchers fabricate cobalt copper catalysts for methane on metal-organic framework [981d]
- Cell chatter tells story of arterial thickening [981d]
- A step towards quantum gravity [981d]
- China claims new world record for strongest steady magnetic field [981d]
- First results from the paleomagnetic study of Cumbre Vieja [981d]
- Elephant tweets highlight divide on conservation issues [981d]
- Will strong and fast-switching artificial muscle be feasible? [981d]
- Nearly 70% of Premier League footballers are abused on Twitter according to AI used to sift through millions of tweets [981d]
- Researchers develop highly accurate sensor for E. coli risk detection [981d]
- Gun violence can't be solved with just one approach, so Indianapolis is trying a range of programs [981d]
- Humor used in English-language terrorist propaganda magazines to reinforce identity, study shows [981d]
- Lake Michigan water levels are expected to stay well below the near-historic highs of 2020 [981d]
- The US is making a big down payment on climate change. Here's what needs to come next [981d]
- Using sound and bubbles to make bandages stickier and longer lasting [981d]
- The future of NASA's laser communications [981d]
- Concise synthesis of pleurotin developed [981d]
- NASA data, acoustic soundscapes assess health of Amazon rainforest [981d]
- Learning how clothes are made has a 'transformative' effect on people's relationship with fast fashion [981d]
- Researcher discovers new orchid species in the mountains of Tanzania [981d]
- X-ray marks the spot in elemental analysis of 15th-century printing press methods [981d]
- More evidence that California weather is trending toward extremes [981d]
- Making oxygen with magnets could help astronauts breathe easy [981d]
- Helping students succeed: Addressing pandemic-related learning loss [981d]
- High-resolution study on California coastal cliff erosion [981d]
- Using mathematics to treat malaria [981d]
- Algorithmic pest control [981d]
- The Soviet Union hunted whales to the brink of extinction, but its scientists secretly tracked its toll [981d]
- Butterfly decoys trick predators into attacking them in conservation study [981d]
- To lock out foot-and-mouth disease, Australia must help its neighbor countries bolster their biosecurity [981d]
- Beyond net-zero: We should, if we can, cool the planet back to pre-industrial levels [981d]
- NZ's first climate adaptation plan is a good start, but crucial questions about cost and timing must be answered [981d]
- Three reasons why disinformation is so pervasive and what we can do about it [981d]
- The circadian clock makes sure plant cells have the time of their lives [981d]
- Drought declared in several parts of England [981d]
- Personality testing in job applications: What can and can't employers ask you? [981d]
- Game of Thrones prequel confirms there will be no sexual violence on screen. Here's why that's important [981d]
- Mature students in universities face three kinds of barriers. How to address them [981d]
- How life on land learned to breathe [981d]
- Evolutionary network of whiptail lizards reveals predictable outcomes of hybridization [981d]
- These unusual moths migrate over thousands of kilometers. We tracked them to reveal their secret navigational skills [981d]
- First synthetic embryos: The scientific breakthrough raises serious ethical questions [981d]
- Ice core taken in Antarctica contains sample of atmosphere from five million years ago [981d]
- What's dynamic pricing? An operations management scholar explains [981d]
- 3D-printed, nickel-based electrocatalysts enable highly efficient hydrogen evolution [981d]
- Linked lanthanides shine light on field of crystal engineering [981d]
- Proper titles for support animals [981d]
- Revealing the salty secrets of the biggest environmental shift since dinosaurs [981d]
- Neutrino rocket model to explain the origin of high-velocity pulsars [981d]
- Reducing the environmental impact of global health aid is essential, expert says [981d]
- Loss of RNA editing in the Caᵥ1.3 channel to enhance spatial memory comes at a price [981d]
- Single-cell RNA sequencing to study salmonella infection [981d]
- 2022 sets record fire activity in southwest Europe: EU [981d]
- High-fidelity Cas13 variants with minimal collateral RNA targeting [981d]
- New van der Waals heterostructures for high-efficiency infrared photodetection [981d]
- Using nature and data to weather coastal storms [981d]
- 'Complicated' day as fires rage in France [981d]
- Over 150 endangered vultures poisoned to death in southern Africa [981d]
- Important milestone on the way to transition metal catalysis with aluminum [981d]
- Breast cancer cells use force to open channels through tissue [981d]
- How patterns in nature arise and inspire everything from scientific theory to biodegradable materials [981d]
- Ethiopia says completes third filling of mega-dam reservoir [981d]
- Cousin of crop-killing bacteria mutating rapidly [981d]
- Brightest stars in the night sky can strip Neptune-sized planets to their rocky cores [981d]
- Drought tightens its grip on Morocco [981d]
- Poaching of 'status symbol' date mussels threatens Italy's coasts [981d]
- European drought dries up rivers, kills fish, shrivels crops [981d]
- Social media helps scientists monitor rarely sighted whales [981d]
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