The Brutalist Report - science
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- New armored dinosaur named for museum professor [1070d]
- Algae blooms increase snowmelt in the Pacific Northwest by 20% [1070d]
- Carbon mitigation payments can make bioenergy crops more appealing for farmers [1070d]
- Tiny nanopores can contribute to faster identification of diseases [1070d]
- We've pumped so much groundwater that we've nudged the Earth's spin, says new study [1070d]
- Study investigates how young fish ingest plastic [1070d]
- New butterfly species named after Smithsonian's retired museum specialist [1070d]
- Dirtiest snow-year in the Wasatch accelerated snowmelt by 17 days in Utah, finds study [1070d]
- In burned-out groves of giant sequoias, crews plant seeds of hope; will they survive? [1070d]
- Research explores why people are more likely to change ethnicity [1070d]
- Composite embankment with L-shaped, two-phase, closed thermosyphons influences permafrost deformation: Study [1070d]
- When homes flood, who retreats and to where? The average move is only seven miles, and race plays a role [1070d]
- Museum exhibit in Norway reveals new details on Neanderthals [1070d]
- Seeking the origin of Indigenous languages in South America [1070d]
- Scientists discover how Golden staph hides and thrives in human cells using state-of-the-art research tool [1070d]
- Study reveals potential breakthrough in grapevine disease resistance [1070d]
- Climate change likely led to violence in early Andean populations [1070d]
- Researchers demonstrate direct comparison of spin-squeezed optical lattice clocks at record precision level [1070d]
- Genome editing used to create disease-resistant rice [1070d]
- New study reveals willingness of papaya farmers in Kenya to reduce pesticide use [1070d]
- Study examines Southern Ocean warming and its climatic impacts [1070d]
- Scientists report 'benchmarks' for extreme space weather [1070d]
- Study offers improved air pollution understanding in China [1070d]
- Previously overlooked algae toxin widespread in southern Indian River Lagoon [1070d]
- Midgut gland of scallops: A valuable source of fucosylated heparan sulfate [1070d]
- Massive underwater plateau near Solomon Islands is younger and its eruption was more protracted than previously thought [1070d]
- High-quality child care found to contribute to later success in science, math [1070d]
- Study: A small number of teachers effectively double the racial gaps among students referred for disciplinary action [1070d]
- Study provides insight into miscarriages in tsetse flies [1070d]
- Reading taught inconsistently in primary schools, finds Australian survey [1070d]
- Many urban waterways were once waste dumps. Despite restoration efforts, there's more to do to bring nature back [1070d]
- Oceans to get better protection with connected underwater technology [1070d]
- Research suggests cleaner air may be possible with a cold catalytic converter [1070d]
- Theoretical discovery: A new path for quantum physics to control chemical reactions [1070d]
- How will the I-95 bridge collapse affect the supply chain? It will be 'staggering,' expert says [1070d]
- Tick-borne Bourbon virus infects people, wildlife in St. Louis area [1070d]
- Oceans absorb 30% of emissions, driven by a huge carbon pump: Tiny marine animals are key to cycle, says study [1070d]
- In a first, researchers image adaptive immune systems at work in fish [1070d]
- There could still be a ninth planet in our solar system. Here's why [1070d]
- Are 'tree-changers' bad at managing their rural properties? A new study wades into the weeds to find the answer [1070d]
- Ensuring food safety and quality in small-scale fisheries: New insights and recommendations [1070d]
- Tropical butterflies' wings could help them withstand climate change, study suggests [1070d]
- Researchers identify homogenization of microplastics in rivers of Qilian Mountain [1070d]
- Lead contamination may mean fewer mockingbirds [1070d]
- Only 30% of show horse owners surveyed in Australia agreed with equine facial hair trimming ban, new study reveals [1070d]
- Study: River Maas contained as many as 84,000 plastic objects per hour during flood [1070d]
- Indigenous knowledge is increasingly valued, but to fully respect it we need to decolonize science. Here's how [1070d]
- International team reports powerful tool for studying, tuning atomically thin materials [1070d]
- Big hair? Bald? How much difference your hair really makes to keep you cool or warm [1070d]
- Chinese Daigou shoppers represent a new type of entrepreneur [1070d]
- Anti-discrimination laws in 1960s to increase wages for women may have been more effective than previously thought [1070d]
- Tempest in a teacup: Physicists make breakthrough in creating turbulence [1070d]
- How traditional Indigenous education helped four lost children survive 40 days in the Amazon jungle [1070d]
- Researchers find little evidence that military policing reduces crime [1070d]
- Why positive education doesn't have to exclude punishment [1070d]
- Water quality in South Africa: Reports show what needs to be fixed, and at what cost [1070d]
- Centromere plasticity and diversity: Researchers identify a novel type of centromere organization [1070d]
- Wildfire smoke threatens already endangered orangutans [1070d]
- How will a warming world impact the Earth's ability to offset our carbon emissions? [1070d]
- World breaks average temperature record for early June: EU [1070d]
- Confidence in science fell in 2022 while political divides persisted, poll shows [1070d]
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