The Brutalist Report - science
- Wild bees are active in woodland treetops, research shows [979d]
- Tropics in crisis: Scientists call for preservation of Guinea's indigenous plants in WWF Living Planet Report 2022 [979d]
- A small trench-dwelling fish makes a splash in deep-sea evolution [979d]
- Reaching new heights in largest ever genome study [979d]
- Scientists demonstrate that electricity may be obtainable from water with a high salt concentration [979d]
- New tool helps researchers investigate clouds, rain and climate change [979d]
- Corn plants with tillers work well in restrictive environments [979d]
- NASA dust detective delivers first maps from space for climate science [979d]
- Endangered fruit-eating animals play an outsized role in a tropical forest—losing them could have dire consequences [979d]
- How advanced optical tweezers revolutionized cell manipulation [979d]
- 2022 US State of the Birds report reveals widespread losses of birds in all habitats—except for one [979d]
- Biden designates his first national monument in the heart of Colorado's Rocky Mountains [979d]
- 'Eureka moments' in science are a myth according to new ebook [979d]
- Mapping the reception of latitude and longitude in early modern China [979d]
- Letting farmland recover may let air quality recover, too [979d]
- Study: 'Exploring' inventors thrive in workplaces with open communications [979d]
- Too little, too late: Study examines why the Endangered Species Act fails [979d]
- Dinosaur 'mummies' might not be as unusual as we think [979d]
- Why erect-crested penguins reject their first egg and lay a second one [979d]
- Thrips show promise in controlling the invasive Brazilian peppertree in Florida [979d]
- Goldilocks influencers: Why high follower count may not be the best driver of engagement on social media [979d]
- A new design for nanofiber interlayer supported forward osmosis composite membranes [979d]
- Examining divergence and overlap in the Ochrosia species [979d]
- Career advancement slower for women in entomology, study finds [979d]
- Research links IQ and betting on horse racing [979d]
- Sea-level rise 'may cross two meters by 2100' [979d]
- South Africa's small-scale farmers still can't find a place in the food value chain [979d]
- Depositors often blame audit firms for bank failure, study finds [979d]
- Viewing Earth from space at night: Tracking our changing black marble [979d]
- Plastics causing multi-organ damage in seabirds [979d]
- Hurricane Fiona: People with disabilities need more support in extreme storms [979d]
- Sociologist interviews formerly incarcerated mothers about the trauma of institutional separation [979d]
- Can we cure the frog pandemic? [979d]
- Martian rock winds back the clock [979d]
- India's enormous solar park was meant to help poor communities. But it left the landless stricken [979d]
- DNA from sediments offers insights into the use of plants by humans in the Paleolithic Age [979d]
- Breaking up hydrogen more easily with copper-titanium catalysts [979d]
- Star duo forms 'fingerprint' in space, NASA's Webb finds [979d]
- Researchers develop system for generating oxygen within cells [979d]
- MacArthur's 2022 'genius grant' winners picked to inspire [979d]
- NASA targets November 14 for Moon rocket launch [979d]
- Research mission to probe Santorini volcano mysteries [979d]
- Patagonia's grand gesture sends the wrong message about ethical capitalism [979d]
- DNA is often used in solving crimes. But how does DNA profiling actually work? [979d]
- Horrible bosses: How algorithm managers are taking over the office [979d]
- How many work projects are too many? Why you should tell your boss to stop at five [979d]
- Decolonizing education in South Africa: A reflection on a learning-teaching approach [979d]
- Supercomputing simulations help reveal traffic mechanisms through the nuclear pore complex [979d]
- The five biggest threats to West Africa's oceans, and what to do about them [979d]
- Black women endure legacy of racism in homeownership and making costly repairs [979d]
- What happens when dissatisfied workers feel they can't speak up in the workplace [979d]
- 'Checkout charity' can increase a shopper's anxiety, especially when asks are automated [979d]
- Young immigrants are looking to social media to engage in politics and elections—even if they are not eligible to vote [979d]
- Genetically engineered bacteria make living materials for self-repairing walls and cleaning up pollution [979d]
- Three Impressionist paintings that give an insight into the complicated history of breastfeeding in the 19th century [979d]
- Computer games may be a key to ecological learning, study says [979d]
- The entire planet's ecosystems classified for the first time [979d]
- Global hotspots for soil conservation are poorly protected [979d]
- Scientists say PFAS contamination should be presumed at over 57,000 US sites [979d]
- Are dingoes the answer to Australia's feral cat and fox problem? [979d]
- Farmland birds best protected by leaving fallow areas for two or more years, letting native plants grow [979d]
- Synthetic cells communicate with organic cells [979d]
- Scientists grow human brain cells in rats to study diseases [979d]
- ACT test scores drop to lowest in 30 years in pandemic slide [979d]
- Amid rising seas, Atlantic City has no plans for retreat [979d]
- Why Europe is so vulnerable to heat waves [979d]
- Using photochemistry to separate plutonium and uranium [979d]
- Magnesium ions slow down water dynamics on short length scales [979d]
- New computational tools to target sex, labor trafficking operations [979d]
- Hubble spots ultra-speedy jet blasting from star crash [979d]
- Researchers discover new multicellular bacteria species [979d]
- Goldfish found to have travel distance memory [979d]
- Rapid test to detect livestock parasite [979d]
- Protecting honey bees from deadly American foulbrood threat with new faster, cheaper test [979d]
- Holistic evolution of charge transfer to photocatalyst surface sites mapped for first time [979d]
- A crystalline attoclock: Ultrafast motion of free electrons in solids tracked to within attoseconds [979d]
- First-of-its-kind database tracks agricultural phosphorus use world-wide [979d]
- Physicists probe 'astonishing' morphing properties of honeycomb-like material [979d]
- Dust plumes observed being 'pushed' into interstellar space by intense starlight [979d]
- 'Wobbling black hole' most extreme example ever detected [979d]
- Turtles found to have relatively large inner ears and unexpectedly large labyrinth morphology [979d]
- Nitro-explosives detection realized by core-sheath pillar architecture [979d]
- Researchers design novel doubly resonant photoacoustic gas sensor [979d]
- Novel zero-valent sulfur production pathway found in deep-sea sulfate-reducing bacterium [979d]
- New species of Marsdenia from Myanmar discovered [979d]
- Factors affecting soil ecological stoichiometry in ecologically fragile areas of China [979d]
- Fungus living inside cave crickets reveals fungal evolution steps [979d]
- Vast ice sheet facing climate fight on two fronts, study finds [979d]
- Accurately tracking how plastic biodegrades [979d]
- Genetic analysis key to understanding Legionella risk, study finds [979d]
- Effect of sexual appeal in advertising on aggression and sexual aggression [979d]
- Twitter gives conservative news greater visibility than liberal content, study finds [979d]
- Social media polarizes politics for a different reason than you might think [979d]
- Super-resolution quantification of single small extracellular vesicles [979d]
- An insect pest acquires multiple plant genes [980d]
- Measuring Zak phase in room-temperature atoms [980d]
- Developing an organic transmembrane device to host and monitor 3-D cell cultures [980d]
- DNA reveals the past and future of coral reefs [980d]
- Black hole burps up shredded star [980d]
- Geoscientists develop a technique that reveals the health of coral reefs from space [980d]
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