The Brutalist Report - science
- Whale like filter-feeding discovered in prehistoric marine reptile [744d]
- Managing domestic and wild cats is likely to remain fraught, new research warns [744d]
- 'Spider-like' mitochondrial structure initiates cell-wide stress response [744d]
- Social media helped contribute to UPND gains in 2021 Zambia elections, analysis shows [744d]
- NASA InSight study finds Mars is spinning faster [744d]
- Boeing's 1st astronaut flight bumped into next year, more repairs needed [744d]
- Consumers should have more visual cues when making online purchases, experts say [744d]
- NASA's deep space communications to get a laser boost [744d]
- Researchers discover antifungal molecule [744d]
- A banner year for the Perseid meteor shower [744d]
- Uncovering the Auger-Meitner effect's crucial role in electron energy loss [744d]
- Breakthrough polymer research promises to revolutionize recycling [744d]
- Male stereotypes drive some countries to overestimate navigation ability [744d]
- Carbon dioxide, not water, triggers explosive basaltic volcanoes [744d]
- Social learning: Simulation model shows how groups can keep important information within and across generations [744d]
- Ravaged by fire, Mojave Desert's famed Joshua trees may be gone forever [744d]
- Dogs with less complex facial markings found to be more expressive in their communication with humans [744d]
- Plastic litter in oceans overestimated but could persist longer than expected, study suggests [744d]
- Sharks along Nantucket: A researcher has tagged 100-plus sharks there as population rebounds [744d]
- Public interest vs. private homes: Climate change and erosion fuel disputes along Lake Michigan's shoreline [744d]
- Novel research takes marine conservation tools to a new dimension [744d]
- Spooky, stealthy night hunters: Revealing the wonderful otherworld of owls [744d]
- Climate change threatens shaligrams, sacred fossils worshipped by Hindus and Buddhists for more than 2,000 years [744d]
- One of 2023's most extreme heat waves is happening in the middle of winter [744d]
- Research reveals online romance scammers' tactics, and how to defend against them [744d]
- Nanoscale 'tattoos' for individual cells could provide early warnings for health problems [744d]
- Off Miami, scientists put corals to a heat-stress test. It's survival of the fittest [744d]
- Current estimates of Lake Erie algae toxicity may miss the mark [744d]
- Storm Antoni: Why naming storms is a risky business [744d]
- How climate change will affect your pet—and how to help them cope [744d]
- Is this the protein plant of the future? New study finds 'sweetness gene' that makes lupins tastier [744d]
- How algae conquered the world—and other epic stories hidden in the rocks of the Flinders Ranges [744d]
- Plastic rocks, plutonium, and chicken bones: The markers we're laying down in deep time [744d]
- 'Dark brown carbon' in wildfires may have even bigger climate impacts than previously thought [744d]
- Flock together: Sparrows drift from favored spots after losing friends [744d]
- J. Robert Oppenheimer's early work revolutionized the field of quantum chemistry, and his theory is still used today [744d]
- Experiments identify important new role of chemical compounds in plant development [744d]
- Museum curator identifies the oldest spider fossil ever found in Germany [744d]
- Butterflies can remember where things are over sizeable spaces, new study finds [744d]
- Using social media to raise awareness of women's resources [744d]
- Stealth swimmers: The fish that hide behind other fish to hunt [744d]
- Lab repeats nuclear fusion feat, with higher yield [744d]
- Parasites can have a positive effect on biodiversity and can play a crucial role in maintaining it [744d]
- Gene grants powerful resistance to resurging plant disease [744d]
- Adapting to water temperature changes: The smart 'coat' of the Yangtze finless porpoise [744d]
- Roman road network spanning the south west UK identified in new research [744d]
- New study shows how the Epstein-Barr virus transforms B cells [744d]
- Study reveals successful strategies for removing invasive caimans from Florida Everglades [744d]
- Researchers measure the dangers of indoor heat [744d]
- Animal study shows a father's care could slow aging, alter brains and behavior [744d]
- Sports media use linked to belief in rape myths [744d]
- Keeping water-treatment membranes from fouling out [744d]
- Estuaries as climate gas hotspots [744d]
- Researchers investigate how a CEO's personality affects corporate culture [744d]
- Climate change impacts on the Great Barrier Reef could become irreversible [744d]
- Spacecraft, landers and rovers could be recycled for parts on the moon [744d]
- Winchcombe meteorite is helping scientists to understand more about asteroids [744d]
- Building blocs for diverse investment [744d]
- Discovering nanomachines within living organisms: Cytochromes P450 unleashed as living soft robots [744d]
- NASA's space-based quantum science lab keeps getting better [744d]
- New program shows after school hours care can boost children's social well-being [744d]
- Hubble glimpses globular cluster NGC 6652 [744d]
- Modeling shows emerging mosquito control approach might be largely resistant to warming temperatures [744d]
- New property of hydrogen predicted [744d]
- Russia to launch lunar mission Friday, first in nearly 50 years [744d]
- Research investigates eclipsing binary CSS J003106.8+313347 [744d]
- Great Barrier Reef decline could impact Queensland's coastal erosion [744d]
- Experimental constraints on the viscosity of the Earth's inner core [744d]
- Boron nitride-based nanocomposites have unexpected properties, researchers discover [744d]
- Single-particle photoacoustic vibrational spectroscopy using optical microresonators [744d]
- Study reveals ideal first offer in negotiations [744d]
- Spain on heat alert as wildfires burn [744d]
- NASA helps spot wine grape disease from skies above California [744d]
- Researchers look at the role of graphene in space technology [744d]
- Scientists discover how trilobites survived environmental change [744d]
- Scientists observe first evidence of 'quantum superchemistry' in the laboratory [744d]
- Researchers reveal mechanism triggering Arctic daily warming [744d]
- Warning sting on Asia's bee pollinators [744d]
- Crucial role of hobbyists in keeping bee industry buzzing [744d]
- Fixing hidden damage in carbon-fiber reinforced epoxy materials with a resin-injection method [744d]
- Chemists need to consider the effects of chemistry beyond the lab to combat environmental crises, say researchers [744d]
- The significance of the mesoscale in multiscale neuroethology modeling [744d]
- Do technological civilizations depend on atmospheric oxygen? [744d]
- Huge blue whale washes ashore in southern Chile [744d]
- Water-stressed Iraq dries up fish farms [744d]
- The EPA's ambitious plan to cut auto emissions to slow climate change runs into skepticism [744d]
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