The Brutalist Report - science
- No new articles in the last 24 hours.
- Powerful gene editing approach boosts rotifers in pantheon of laboratory animals [630d]
- Drought-hit Panama Canal must 'adapt or die' as water levels drop [630d]
- Brazil row over switch to e-books in Sao Paulo schools [630d]
- NASA back in touch with Voyager 2 after 'interstellar shout' [630d]
- Putting starch into bio-based polymer makes bioplastics more compostable [630d]
- Plant poachers damage forest preserves as demand for ramps and morels makes foraging more profitable [630d]
- New research shows the complexity of bacterial circadian clocks [630d]
- Florida corals in hotter water than first thought. Scientists blame 'weird phenomenon' [630d]
- Pollution risk for Olympic open water test in Seine [630d]
- Discarded plastic blights Honduran mangrove island [630d]
- World's oceans set new surface temperature record: EU monitor [630d]
- Researchers establish new reptile cell lines [630d]
- Q&A: What does an aging Congress mean for a much younger nation? [630d]
- Study identifies disparities in testing and treating well water among low-income, BIPOC households in NC [630d]
- Long-term study finds nitrogen fixation hot spots in Atlantic seaweed [630d]
- Research reveals the ecological threats of small-scale fisheries in Thailand [630d]
- In the treetops: Ecologist studies canopy soil abundance, chemistry [630d]
- Children found to usually be the poorest members of refugee communities [630d]
- Conflict between humans and wildlife in Tanzania is being poorly managed—and climate change is making things worse [630d]
- Team creates power generator that runs on natural atmospheric humidity [630d]
- Dinosaur track site in Lesotho: How a wrong turn led to an exciting find [630d]
- Single drop of ethanol to revolutionize nanosensor manufacture [630d]
- New world record: Thinnest-ever pixel detector installed [630d]
- Scientists develop novel method to synthesize azide compounds for wider industrial applications [630d]
- 3D models to study the origin of Linya, the prehistoric woman who lived in the Pyrenean foothills [630d]
- China's Chang'e-7 will deploy a hopper that jumps into a crater in search of water ice [630d]
- Cats first finagled their way into human hearts and homes thousands of years ago—here's how [630d]
- 20% of young people who forwarded nudes say they had permission—but only 8% gave it. Why the gap? [630d]
- Exploring the self-organizing origins of life [630d]
- The 'Gulf Stream' will not collapse in 2025: What the alarmist headlines got wrong [630d]
- Why ASEAN nations need to jointly fund their fight against illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing [630d]
- Small farms take center stage in European push to bolster local food trade [630d]
- Liquid metal may be a 'Terminator terror' in the global fight against pathogens [630d]
- How a transparent conductor responds to strain [630d]
- Physicists synthesize single-crystalline iron in the form likely found in Earth's core [630d]
- 'City killers' and half-giraffes: How many scary asteroids really go past Earth every year? [630d]
- Remains found in China may belong to third human lineage [630d]
- How secondary cities can compete with superstar cities through innovation competitiveness [630d]
- Researchers reveal role of protein oxidative folding in stem cell aging [630d]
- MHZ9 modulates ethylene signaling at translational level in rice [630d]
- New strategy decodes dynamic structure of proteins within cells [630d]
- Researchers may have solved the 'mirror twins' defect plaguing the next generation of 2D semiconductors [630d]
- Researchers propose new method for pulsar timing and radio-frequency interference mitigation [630d]
- Team identifies gas streamers feeding triple baby stars [630d]
- Aggression in restaurant kitchens makes for good TV but lousy working conditions, say researchers: Q&A [630d]
- Kordofan giraffes face local extinction if poaching continues, study suggests [630d]
- Researchers investigate hard X-ray emission of neutron star low-mass X-ray binaries [630d]
- Unveiling the anomalous dynamics of non-collinear antiferromagnets [630d]
- NASA data helps Bangladeshi farmers save water, money, energy [630d]
- XRISM mission ready to explore universe's hottest locales [630d]
- Hartshorn salt and 'baking' may solve a serious environmental problem, scientists believe [630d]
- Crater lake sediments in Northeast China reveal 25-thousand-year-long record of dust activity in East Asia [630d]
- System that uses magnetic levitation enables early airborne virus detection [630d]
- How the hospital pathogen Acinetobacter baumannii quickly adapts to new environmental conditions [630d]
- Database with 2,400 prehistoric sites, a tool for human evolutionary studies [630d]
- The art of Roman water management revealed [630d]
- Plankton evidence reveals a seasonally ice-free ocean during the Last Interglacial [630d]
- COVID lockdown: Are high-income earners more resistant to returning to the office? [630d]
- Greenland glacier N79 may not be as stable as previously thought, research suggests [630d]
- Novel liquid metal nanoparticles for cancer photoimmunotherapy synthesized [630d]
- Biosphere 2 experiment reveals that soils in drought stress leak more volatile organic compounds into the atmosphere [630d]
- Study examines Earth and Mars to determine how climate change affects the paths of rivers [630d]
- Scientists discover how parasites of viruses drive superbug evolution [630d]
- Researchers demonstrate first application of MicroED to nucleic acid crystallography [630d]
- Loch Ness struggles with Scotland's shifting climate [630d]
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