The Brutalist Report - science
- No new articles in the last 24 hours.
- Oldest vertebrate fossil heart ever found tells a 380 million-year-old story of evolution [855d]
- Ecuador launches floating islands to save stinky Guayaquil estuary [855d]
- Climate takes backseat in Italy vote despite extreme events [855d]
- Japan braces for 'very dangerous' Typhoon Nanmadol [855d]
- Record of Antarctic ice sheet response to climate cycles found in rock samples [855d]
- Namibian cheetahs head for India, 70 years after local extinction [856d]
- Cutting edge science reveals Gribshunden's shipwrecked secrets [856d]
- Beads show European trade in African interior used Indigenous routes [856d]
- Pythons are true choke artists: Size alone doesn't explain how they can eat such big prey [856d]
- When did dinosaurs go extinct? The theories on how it happened and what survived [856d]
- Support for art and other cultural objects can be strengthened by highlighting their collective value [856d]
- Recreating 'ghost neighborhoods' destroyed by highways [856d]
- Differential impacts of adult trees on offspring and non-offspring recruits in a subtropical forest [856d]
- Genetically-modified purple tomatoes might be coming to a US grocery store near you [856d]
- A third of Aussies fear losing their homes to climate change [856d]
- Decoding canine cognition: Machine learning gives glimpse of how a dog's brain represents what it sees [856d]
- Did life ever exist on Mars? NASA's Perseverance rover finds organic matter in rock samples [856d]
- Decoupling engineering of formamidinium–cesium perovskites for efficient photovoltaics [856d]
- Researchers reveal reactive gallium-hydride species on gallium oxide surface [856d]
- A new strategy to speed up cold case investigations [856d]
- Tailoring the particle sizes of Pt₅Ce alloy nanoparticles for the oxygen reduction reaction [856d]
- Palm oil's implications on the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals [856d]
- Examining the roots of great wine tourism [856d]
- Thinking about quiet quitting? Here's why—and how—you should talk to your boss instead [856d]
- Microbially induced carbonate precipitation can improve coarse-grained, salty soil [856d]
- Simulations show increased jet stream waviness due to asymmetric rise in global temperatures [856d]
- Parenting alone isn't to blame for gender inequality [856d]
- Study finds one in four adults experience transportation insecurity [856d]
- We may be underestimating just how bad carbon-belching SUVs are for the climate, and for our health [856d]
- Ever heard of ocean forests? They're larger than the Amazon and more productive than we thought [856d]
- 'Like a waterfall': Italy storms kill 10, spark climate debate [856d]
- The koala: When it's smart to be slow [856d]
- Direct democracy can force governments to better represent the people—but it doesn't always work out [856d]
- A fossil baby helped scientists explain how mammals thrived after the dinosaur extinction [856d]
- The horseracing industry is ignoring what science says about whipping [856d]
- Removing author fees can help open access journals make research available to everyone [856d]
- Some microbes lie in wait until their hosts unknowingly give them the signal to start multiplying and kill them [856d]
- Report recommends policies, mechanisms for return, ethical uses for research of human remains in museums [856d]
- Researchers find neuronal pathway in rats that drives social grooming [856d]
- Training for Dixie Fire survivors sheds light on the long road to recovery [856d]
- Research shows constituents ask female legislators to do more [856d]
- Q&A: What explains 'quiet quitting' in the workplace? [856d]
- How quantum physicists are looking for life on exoplanets [856d]
- Researchers model the effects of honest and dishonest gossip [856d]
- More leadership, structure needed in respectful relationships education in Australian schools [856d]
- Researchers find the cell cortex is activated by thousands of short-lived protein condensates [856d]
- Size, not sex, is key to the development of wildebeest horns [856d]
- Techniques learned from Earth climate science aid in the search for potentially habitable exoplanets [856d]
- Image: UK heat wave [856d]
- Surprise hydrological shifts imperil water resources [856d]
- Data science reveals universal rules shaping cells' power stations [856d]
- Does exercise drive development? In the sea anemone, the way you move matters [856d]
- Synthesis of bare aromatic polymers with dendrimer support allows the creation of unique hybrid materials [856d]
- The emotional labor of staying cheerful at work can lead to employee burnout [856d]
- Examining the individual signatures of the 'whoops' that hyenas make [856d]
- Hubble captures galaxy NGC 1961 [856d]
- Researchers who collaborate with others in multiple research areas found to publish more highly cited papers [856d]
- 'Like a new planet': Volcano draws visitors to Spanish isle [856d]
- A new holographic microscope allows scientists to see through the skull and image the mouse brain [856d]
- Phase transitions in olivine may be the cause of deep seismic faulting [856d]
- Feeling out of equilibrium in a dual geometric world: A novel theory for nonlinear dissipative phenomena [856d]
- The number of ancient Martian lakes might have been dramatically underestimated by scientists [856d]
- A general chemical principle for creating closure-stabilizing integrin inhibitors [856d]
- Germ cells move like tiny bulldozers [856d]
- Study suggests new mechanism for lipid transporter [856d]
- A closer look at third-hand smoke and its risks [856d]
- Refreezing Earth's poles feasible and cheap, new study finds [856d]
- Global energy spectrum of the general oceanic circulation [856d]
- Gut microbes and humans on a joint evolutionary journey [856d]
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