The Brutalist Report - science
- Ancient herbivore's diet weakened teeth and lead to eventual starvation, suggests study [697d]
- Unraveling the role of the NiO electrocatalyst in alcohol electrooxidation reactions [698d]
- Generation game: Gene-edited mosquitos to fight malaria [698d]
- New model offers a way to speed up drug discovery [698d]
- Non-police services for domestic abusive victims shown to decrease witness statement provision, but reduce victimisation [698d]
- For pet dogs, 'running with the pack' may be the best prevention to promote healthier living [698d]
- Seaweed farming may help tackle global food insecurity [698d]
- Most nations get low marks on 'net-zero' climate plans [698d]
- Untapping barley's grain yield potential by mitigating floral degeneration [698d]
- How and why NASA gives a name to every spot it studies on Mars [698d]
- Multifunctional self-healing liquid metal hydrogel developed for human-computer interaction [698d]
- Mass spectrometry uncovers actions of protein 'glues' [698d]
- Study shows South Africa, India and Australia shared similar volcanic activity 3.5 billion years ago [698d]
- First Saimaa ringed seals successfully translocated within Lake Saimaa in Finland [698d]
- Researchers create engineered human tissue to study mosquito bites, disease [698d]
- In schools that could benefit most, building relationships is key to increasing capacity for nutrition education [698d]
- CALorimetric Electron Telescope (CALET) captures charge-sign dependent cosmic ray modulation [698d]
- Professors call for further study of potential uses of AI in special education, avoiding bans [698d]
- Tailoring fluorine-rich solid electrolyte interphase to boost long cycling stability of lithium metal batteries [698d]
- Public guaranteed child support programs may help reduce poverty worldwide [698d]
- Using a multi‐lens framework for landscape decisions [698d]
- Opinion: Republicans' anti-ESG attack may be silencing insurers, but isn't changing their pro-climate business decisions [698d]
- Q&A with Ludovic Slimak, the archaeologist who wants to rewrite the history of early humans in Europe [698d]
- Nanomedicine: Using a patient's immune cells to prevent the spread of cancer [698d]
- Foraging walk near Chicago beach teaches residents about edible plants they didn't know grew in the heart of the city [698d]
- How safe is the air? Here's how to check and what the numbers mean [698d]
- US cities shrouded in toxic haze as reinforcements reach Canada wildfires [698d]
- Blue carbon: Could a solution to the climate challenge be buried in the depths of fjords? [698d]
- UK public among most trusting in world: Report [698d]
- Volcanic tsunami hazards: What can the Santorini seafloor tell us? [698d]
- Researchers 'split' phonons in step toward new type of quantum computer [698d]
- Without fully implementing net-zero pledges, the world will miss climate goals [698d]
- Novel method of squeezing molecules together could reduce chemical manufacturing waste [698d]
- Robotic vehicles track dengue-carrying mosquitos in Taiwan sewers [698d]
- New study shows land mammals traveled farther during severe COVID-19 lockdowns [698d]
- Lost giants: New study reveals decline in abundance of African megafauna [698d]
- Scientists develop artificial molecules that behave like real ones [698d]
- Giving parents better school quality data encourages them to consider less affluent, less white schools—to a point [698d]
- Satellite images show that Spain is in danger of drying out one of the main wetlands in Europe [698d]
- More than 60 billion leaf litter invertebrates died in the Black Summer fires. Here's what that did to ecosystems [698d]
- Unlocking the blood-nerve barrier to facilitate drug delivery [698d]
- Ecologists highlight the invisible effects of human activity on nature [698d]
- ESG investing has made little impact on the green energy transition so far. Why is that? [698d]
- How universities could help whole communities tackle climate change [698d]
- Analysis: Current emissions targets could keep planet below 2°C temperature rise, but a turbocharged effort is needed [698d]
- As expected, wine grapes found to have high deleterious genetic burden [698d]
- Black men are the most frequent victims of killings by off-duty officers, finds new research [698d]
- Sharks and humans sharing waters along California coast more often than previously thought [698d]
- US-German satellites show California water gains after record winter [698d]
- Global symmetry found to be not completely necessary for the protection of topological boundary states [698d]
- Complete chloroplast genomes clarify phylogenetic placement of six polygonatum species [698d]
- Ponderosa forests struggle in the face of Southwest megadrought [698d]
- New keen-sighted satellite will view distant stars, assist Webb telescope [698d]
- Exploring how community-based social norms evolve [698d]
- Q&A: Scientist explains effects of Canadian wildfires on local air quality [698d]
- How Schrödinger's cat makes better qubits [698d]
- Trailblazing research explores life in deepest parts of Indian Ocean [698d]
- Monitoring night-time cloud cover at the Muztagh-ata site [698d]
- Long-term analysis finds seagull attacks contribute to death of southern right whale calves [698d]
- Scientists discover how plants fight major root disease [698d]
- Unsustainable coffee production is making more and more people sick, says study [698d]
- 'Mobile money' has been a game-changer in developing countries, but it may not be serving those who need it most [698d]
- Frequent lengthy space travel takes a toll on astronauts' brains, study shows [698d]
- Confinement effects of carbon nanotubes on polyoxometalate clusters enhance electrochemical energy storage [698d]
- When water temperatures change, the molecular motors of cephalopods do too [698d]
- Study: Octopuses use RNA editing to rapidly respond to temperature changes by altering protein function [698d]
- New knowledge of ancient grain: Researchers map complete millet genome to help with food security [698d]
- Pulling its weight: Team identifies protein key to chromosome movement during cell division [698d]
- Study finds different nitrogen saturation thresholds in a temperate steppe [698d]
- New study further narrows the search for elusive pairs of monster black holes [698d]
- Here comes El Nino: It's early, likely to be big, sloppy and add even more heat to a warming world [698d]
- Researchers detect elusive planets with CHEOPS [698d]
- Study sheds light on biosynthesis and transport of pollen coat precursors in angiosperms [698d]
- Research sheds light on new model of cosmological dark matter [698d]
- Scientists reveal regulation mechanism of soybean cyst nematode responses to chemical signals [698d]
- Researchers find structures that enable rapid transmission of nerve impulses in insects [698d]
- Team finds reliable predictor of plant species persistence, coexistence [698d]
- Researchers discover a new way to develop drugs without side effects [698d]
- A tracking device that uses animal movements as a power source [698d]
- An electron microscopy study unravels the mysteries of actin filament polarity [698d]
- Aviation turbulence strengthened as the world warmed, research shows [698d]
- Employers should think twice before implementing peer recognition programs [698d]
- Study finds socially tolerant monkeys have better impulse control [698d]
- Researchers tune thermal conductivity of materials 'on the fly' for more energy-efficient devices [698d]
- Why earthquakes happen more frequently in Britain than Ireland [698d]
- World warming at record 0.2 C per decade, scientists warn [698d]
- US haze from Canada fires rare and extreme event: expert [698d]
- Philippines on alert as volcano spews ash [698d]
- Greenhouse gas emissions at 'all-time high' causing unprecedented rate of global warming, warn scientists [698d]
- Brazilian Amazon deforestation falls 31% under Lula [698d]
- Air pollution cloaks eastern US for a second day. Here's why there is so much smoke [698d]
- In unusual orca sighting, tour spots at least 20 killer whales off San Francisco [698d]
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