The Brutalist Report - science
- Alaska scientists find novel way to aid earthquake magnitude determination [631d]
- Finger on the pulse of drug delivery: Preclinical study could pave the way for multiple drug doses in a single injection [631d]
- Perseverance rover captures view of Mars' Belva Crater [631d]
- NASA releases new solar eclipse educational materials [631d]
- Catching foodborne illness early [631d]
- New use for AI: Correctly estimating fish stocks [631d]
- Perfection: The enemy of evolution [631d]
- Researchers uncover the hidden complexity of the Montmorency tart cherry genome [631d]
- Reading comprehension not worsened by noise, study finds [631d]
- Viral videos about private moments may affect offline relationships [631d]
- Study: Wildfire spread risk increases where trees, shrubs replace grasses [631d]
- Study: Information about climate-induced migration spurs negative attitudes about immigrants [631d]
- Why do Japanese teachers seem unready to teach critical thinking in classrooms? [631d]
- Smart material prototype challenges Newton's laws of motion [631d]
- Researchers call for Canada to braid Indigenous rights with endangered species laws [631d]
- Researchers develop optoelectronic graded neurons for perceiving dynamic motion [631d]
- Researchers transform our understanding of crystals [631d]
- High-power, high-energy, all-fiber Mamyshev oscillator [631d]
- A new tool for deforestation detection [631d]
- Historical memories have long reach in consumer preferences, study finds [631d]
- Colorado wildflowers could be epic this year thanks to abundant snowpack, but other factors in play [631d]
- These Marines drank Camp Lejeune's poison. The road to justice is long [631d]
- First SuperCDMS detector towers ready for dark matter detection experiment [631d]
- Disentanglement: Breaking the activity-selectivity 'tradeoff' effect in catalytic conversion [631d]
- Coyotes, bobcats move into human-inhabited areas to avoid apex predators, only to be killed by people [631d]
- Half of the world's largest lakes are losing water, shows new study [631d]
- Wiring up quantum circuits with light [631d]
- In years after El Niño, global economy loses trillions [631d]
- A perfect 'pathogen' storm: Vibrio bacteria, Sargassum and plastic marine debris [631d]
- Humanity's earliest recorded kiss occurred in Mesopotamia 4,500 years ago, claims new study [631d]
- Why Antarctic ice shelves are losing their mass and how it leads to global sea level rise [631d]
- Even after a wet winter, California is preparing for the next drought [631d]
- High-temperature shock synthesis of high-entropy alloy nanoparticles for catalysis [631d]
- France moves to ban smoking in woodlands to combat growing climate-related risk of mega fires [631d]
- An innovative heat shield that doesn't need to be replaced between missions [631d]
- Astronomers prepare for the next 1,000 years of hazardous asteroid impacts [631d]
- Researchers take an innovative approach to investigating inequity in parks [631d]
- How cells select DNA damage repair pathways [631d]
- A strange quark matter core likely exists in neutron stars [631d]
- Ancient mass extinction event may not be so strange after all, says new study [631d]
- Space missions set to improve solar storm forecasts [631d]
- Researchers analyze carbon sequestration in California Current Ecosystem [631d]
- Q&A: Bringing the debt ceiling down to our level [631d]
- Satellites are tracking patterns that lead up to El Niño [631d]
- Researchers advise limiting the number of intercropping species in rubber-based agroforestry [631d]
- Conservationists propose 'global conservation basic income' to safeguard biodiversity [631d]
- Deep learning system can analyze images to protect deep-sea coral reefs much faster than humans [631d]
- The importance of social media in corporate social responsibility [631d]
- 'Please do not assume the worst of us': Students know AI is here to stay and want schools to teach them how to use it [631d]
- UK researchers exposing scale and danger of forced marriages [631d]
- New study helps solve a 30-year-old puzzle: How is climate change affecting El Niño and La Niña? [631d]
- Biodiversity discovery: Unknown species ('dark taxa') drive insect diversity [631d]
- If the Higgs can reach the Hidden Valley, we will see new physics in next-generation accelerators [631d]
- Could dark photon dark matter be directly detected using radio telescopes? [631d]
- Using an organic catalyst to make chlorine more energy efficiently [631d]
- Fixing broken flood gauges is important. But most Australians don't evacuate even when they know the water is coming [631d]
- As Canada fights the Alberta and BC wildfires, it must also plan for future disasters [631d]
- Some countries express fewer negative emotions than others: This is how people feel around the world [631d]
- Study reveals key molecular interaction that sets the timing of our biological clocks [631d]
- Climate change to push species over abrupt tipping points, finds study [631d]
- Keeping California's oil in the ground will improve health but affect jobs, find study [631d]
- How cells rapidly create protrusions for exploration and movement [631d]
- Nontoxic powder uses sunlight to quickly disinfect contaminated drinking water [631d]
- Fossil fragments shed light on a new spinosaurid dinosaur found in Spain [631d]
- Optimized prime editing alters genes of living mice, marking major advance [631d]
- Researchers identify a pigment present in the Santa Pola salt flats as an anticarcinogenic agent [631d]
- How psychologists helped NSW Police find super-recognizers in its ranks [631d]
- XTE J1906+090 is a persistent low-luminosity Be X-ray binary, study suggests [631d]
- Researchers develop photochromic active colloids for the development of new smart materials [631d]
- Researchers improving technology to generate high harmonics in nonlinear nanostructured metasurfaces [631d]
- Humans were making fires at least 250,000 years ago in Europe, research finds [631d]
- Scientists discover past climate change to blame for Antarctica's giant underwater landslides [631d]
- Private satellites give boost to public sector in climate fight [631d]
- Canada seeks foreign help to fight spreading wildfires [631d]
- Oil project near Amazon River mouth blocked by Brazil's environment agency [631d]
- US metros are growing, many reversing 2021 drops, new estimates show [631d]
- Powerful earthquake shakes deep beneath Guatemala, with no immediate reports of damage [631d]
- Hanging by a purple thread: Study highlights threats to murasaki plant [631d]
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