The Brutalist Report - science
- New research reports no sign of decrease in global carbon dioxide emissions [847d]
- New study describes how employee opinion impacts CEO dismissal [847d]
- Participating in college football bowl games may slightly improve players' academic outcomes, study finds [847d]
- Environmental justice has the White House's attention—but funding won't immediately solve deeply entrenched problems [847d]
- Should kids be cramming for tests or competing at sports? [847d]
- Footprints indicate human presence in Spain in Middle Pleistocene, 200,000 years earlier than previously thought [847d]
- Planting and management of improved grass in tropical savannas can increase soil carbon by 15% [847d]
- Team uses AI and satellite images to release first-ever global estimates for road transportation greenhouse emissions [847d]
- Mineral soil in forests accumulates carbon as trees grow [847d]
- A dual boost for optical delay scanning [847d]
- Global changes in wetlands help clarify the decline of shorebirds [847d]
- New study suggests evolutionary forces are behind collective discrimination [847d]
- Bibliometric study ranks world-leading institutions researching liver cirrhosis [847d]
- Centimeter-scale multicolor printing with a pixelated optical cavity [847d]
- Using 1980s environmental modeling to mitigate future disasters [847d]
- 116 scientists reject WHO's draft PFAS guidelines [847d]
- Section of destroyed shuttle Challenger found on ocean floor [847d]
- Research reveals how a common bacterium may spread from the intestine [847d]
- Arts education can support students' growth towards global citizenship [847d]
- A new way of fabricating high-efficiency diffraction gratings for astronomical spectroscopy [847d]
- Chinese incursions into India are increasing and are strategically planned, study finds [847d]
- Hundred-year-old riddle in botany reveals key plant adaptation to dry land [847d]
- Researchers manage to extend the field of view for speckle-correlation imaging under a limited memory effect [847d]
- Why we build networks that hurt our performance, and what we can do about it [847d]
- Climate change affects mosquito behavior, making it harder to end malaria in South Africa [847d]
- Burning waste must end: African leaders look to recycling for better health and value [847d]
- Togo's new climate policies reduce greenhouse gas emissions and improve air quality—here's how [847d]
- Disparities in advanced math and science skills begin by kindergarten [847d]
- What is a flash drought? An Earth scientist explains [847d]
- American workers feel alienated, helpless and overwhelmed. Here's one way to alleviate their malaise [847d]
- Out of sight, out of mind: Europe's increasing pushback against migrants [847d]
- What is a subtropical storm and how is it different from a tropical or extratropical system? [847d]
- NASA laser reflector for ESA satnav on Lunar Pathfinder [847d]
- Previously unknown monumental temple discovered near the Tempio Grande in Vulci [847d]
- Study: Wildlife are more sensitive to humans than we thought. How does that affect trails? [847d]
- Study provides first snapshot of global experiences with water insecurity [847d]
- Irish businesses are largely underprepared for a net zero transition [847d]
- Legacy of dust: How Owens Valley air pollution increases LA water bills [847d]
- Young people most likely to see career benefits to remote working [847d]
- Dead white pelican found on grounds of San Diego Safari Park tests positive for bird flu [847d]
- Cosmic radiation detection takes front seat during NASA's Artemis I space mission [847d]
- Recyclable composites help drive net-zero goal [847d]
- Canine cancers give clues about human health risks [847d]
- Why Putin's retreat from Kherson could be his most humiliating defeat yet [847d]
- Extremists use video games to recruit vulnerable youth. Here's what parents and gamers need to know [847d]
- Canada identifies international students as 'ideal immigrants' but supports are lacking [847d]
- Carbon-busting hemp could help transform Scottish agriculture to zero emissions [847d]
- 70-plus seems the new 50 for male politicians, but they're threatening the world order [847d]
- Digital activism: Study shows the internet has helped women in urban Ghana and Nigeria raise their voices [847d]
- Crime is lower when cities are greener: Evidence from South Africa supports the link [847d]
- Dung beetle mothers protect their offspring from a warming world by digging deeper [847d]
- Climate change: West Africa's oceans at risk because of a lack of monitoring [847d]
- The myth of the 'math person' [847d]
- Children motivated by morality rather than social norms when it comes to question of eating animals, according to study [847d]
- Tiny bubbles boost alternative cancer therapy efficiency [847d]
- New technology creates carbon neutral chemicals out of thin air [847d]
- The study of evolution is fracturing, and that may be a good thing [847d]
- What happens if a country fails to comply with EU environmental legislation? [847d]
- Thirsty wheat needed new water management strategy in ancient China [847d]
- Tensions and war undermine climate cooperation, but there's a silver lining [847d]
- Can Australians separate sports and gambling? [847d]
- Video: What is ESA's Moonlight initiative? [847d]
- New study finds our ancient relatives were not so simple after all [847d]
- New research on identity cues in social media shows it's not just what is said but who says it that matters [847d]
- The world will probably warm beyond the 1.5-degree limit. But peak warming can be curbed [847d]
- Nanotechnology platform enables immune conversion of cancer cells, sensitizing them to immunotherapy [847d]
- Death of a star reveals midsize black hole lurking in a dwarf galaxy [847d]
- Global distributive justice and systemic transformations key to planetary stability, study finds [847d]
- Mimicking life: A breakthrough in non-living materials [847d]
- Using monsoons of the past to predict climate conditions of the future [847d]
- Quantum sensors for GPS-free orientation [847d]
- Creating surface plasmon polariton amplification using free-electron pumping to build a new kind of laser [847d]
- Tianma 65-m radio telescope helps to unveil mysteries of Orion Kleinmann–Low Nebula [847d]
- NASA's MAVEN observes Mars light show caused by major solar storm [847d]
- A FLASH of radiation may pave the way toward new cancer care for people and pets alike [847d]
- New theory of electron spin to aid quantum devices [847d]
- An early universe analog built in a lab in Germany [847d]
- Fluid interfaces deform soft particles [847d]
- Psychologists reveal the secrets behind song popularity [847d]
- Peptidic supramolecular assemblies enhance chemotherapy for colorectal cancer [847d]
- Nicole weakens to Tropical Storm, threatens NASA launch [847d]
- Dash for gas imperils 1.5C climate goal: report [847d]
- US weather satellite, test payload launched into space [847d]
- Economic interests cloud hazardous chemicals reductions [847d]
- Efficient mRNA delivery by branched lipids [847d]
- A cobalt(II) porphyrin with a tethered imidazole for efficient oxygen reduction and evolution electrocatalysis [847d]
- Control of cell population sizes: When is enough enough? [847d]
- World at a 'tipping point' in climate change talks, COP27 delegate says [847d]
- Research investigates the effects of stellar rotation in star cluster NGC 1850 [847d]
- Destruction of forests and grasslands is biggest cause of biodiversity loss [847d]
- ESO images a wondrous star factory to mark 60 years of collaboration [847d]
- Copper a clue in the fight against cancer [847d]
- Injections for diabetes, cancer could become unnecessary [847d]
- Nightmare Atlantic oil spill 'could happen again' [847d]
- Black tides: worst oil spills in Europe [847d]
- Pre-pandemic conspiratorial mindset predicted hesitance to accept COVID-19 vaccine [847d]
- Navigating urban spaces: Indoor and outdoor wayfinding technology for vision-impaired people [847d]
- Earth-sun distance dramatically alters seasons in the equatorial Pacific in a 22,000-year cycle [847d]
- Food science research could help astronauts eat well on future Mars missions [847d]
- Flies smell the motion of odors and use it to navigate, study finds [847d]
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