The Brutalist Report - science
- America's role in combating global poverty examined in new book [546d]
- Consistent metabolism may prove costly for insects in saltier water [546d]
- New study looks at attitudes towards political violence [546d]
- How to protect self-esteem when a career goal dies [546d]
- AI-driven earthquake forecasting shows promise in trials [546d]
- Salmon are spawning in Arctic rivers, researchers confirm [546d]
- 'Roving sentinels' discover new air pollution sources [546d]
- Study: Tipped restaurant workers in Chicago compensated at rates below minimum wage [546d]
- Don't feel appreciated by your partner? Relationship interventions can help [546d]
- Research offers insight into AI protections for workers [546d]
- Hubble captures starry Cetus constellation galaxy [546d]
- Saudi firm that grows hay in California and Arizona to lose farm leases over water issue [546d]
- Small-scale magnetism leads to large-scale solar atmosphere [546d]
- Meet the next alien invaders to threaten nature and economies in Scotland [546d]
- Secondary education needs to empower students to respond to climate emergency, says UK report [546d]
- Andalusian families do not have the same bilingual education opportunities, says study [546d]
- New microscopy method can help put sharper focus on plankton samples [546d]
- An important step towards a novel method for early cancer diagnosis [546d]
- Bewick's swans choose wintering areas based on the weather, shows long-term GPS data study [546d]
- How much are you willing to pay for a product or service? It depends on your other options and the given context [546d]
- Biologist improves carp growth with lactic acid [546d]
- Study shows defects spreading through diamond faster than the speed of sound [546d]
- Agronomists find microbes to protect tomatoes from dangerous fungus [546d]
- New research shows plants could worsen air pollution on a warming planet [546d]
- Chemists make antibacterial films more effective with iron [546d]
- Hubble finds bizarre explosion in unexpected place [546d]
- Further evidence points to footprints in New Mexico being the oldest sign of humans in Americas [546d]
- Researchers say that disinfectants can promote antibiotic resistance [546d]
- Precise genome engineering and protein activity profiling uncover new cancer drug targets [546d]
- Amazon rain forest hides thousands of records of ancient Indigenous communities under its canopy, says new study [546d]
- Natural genetically modified crops: Grasses take evolutionary shortcut by borrowing genes from their neighbors [546d]
- Chinese scientists are combating a glacier's melting by covering it with a blanket [546d]
- Ozone hole grows large again [546d]
- Big Earth imager to be tested on small Vega CubeSat [546d]
- Startup selection, success, and sustainability [546d]
- Researchers find a new quantum ruler to explore exotic matter [546d]
- Discovery made about Fischer–Tropsch process could help improve fuel production [546d]
- The end of genes: Routine test reveals unique divergence in genetic code [546d]
- New discovery may 'unlock' the future of infectious disease and cancer treatment [546d]
- A new qubit platform is created atom by atom [546d]
- Dragonfly eyes inspire new microlens array processing technique [546d]
- Queer characters in computer games: Greater diversity than before, but plenty of room for more [546d]
- Study shows limestone can serve as a repository of microbial genetic information about the deep biosphere [546d]
- Climate change is a fiscal disaster for local governments: Study shows how it's testing communities in Florida [546d]
- Q&A: Millions of US children have mediocre reading skills. Engaged parents and a committed school curriculum can help [546d]
- Q&A: Johannesburg has been hit by severe water shortages—new plan to manage the crisis isn't the answer [546d]
- Made in America: How Biden's climate package is fueling the global drive to net zero [546d]
- How a disgruntled scientist looking to prove his food wasn't fresh discovered radioactive tracers and won a Nobel Prize [546d]
- Foxes in Massachusetts caught and injured in illegal animal traps, police are investigating [546d]
- Digitizing UK natural history collections is vital to understand life on Earth, says report [546d]
- 6 things to know about NASA's asteroid-exploring Psyche mission [546d]
- $1B will bring more city trees, but it'll take more than seedlings to grow urban forests [546d]
- Gendered discrimination and disrespect 'all too common' in legal profession, Australian report shows [546d]
- In tune: Classical concert-goers' hearts, breathing synchronize [546d]
- Laser-scribed graphene for sensors [546d]
- Lynxes and vultures offer insights for European wildlife conservation [546d]
- Plot thickens in the hunt for a ninth planet [546d]
- Cocoa prices are surging: West African countries should seize the moment to negotiate a better deal for farmers [546d]
- Lion protection fee paid by tourists could help stop trophy hunting, says South African study [546d]
- Teachers can nurture students who care about the world: Four approaches that would help them [546d]
- How Europe's authoritarian populists maintain the illusion of a free press [546d]
- New study helps explain why people cooperate when no one is looking [546d]
- In checking chess's gender bias, researchers find parents and mentors shortchange girls' potential [546d]
- Hubble captures intermediate spiral galaxy NGC 6951 [546d]
- Researchers propose radical change in how animal facial expressions are defined and studied [546d]
- Gravitational distortion of time helps tell modified gravity apart from a dark force [546d]
- Are we dating the same guy? Online groups toe the line between protecting women and defaming men [546d]
- Nobel Prize for chemistry recognizes the power of nanotechnology [546d]
- It wasn't just a tree: Why it feels so bad to lose the iconic Sycamore Gap tree and others like it [546d]
- Women take fewer risks because they think about losing more than men do, research suggests [546d]
- New path for early human migrations through a once-lush Arabia contradicts a single 'out of Africa' origin [546d]
- Yes, the original Barbie is a stereotype. But children also create their own 'Barbie worlds' [546d]
- Understanding the dynamics of snow cover in forests can help us predict flood risks [546d]
- Chemists obtain derivatives of the natural polymer chitosan, which outpace existing antibiotics [546d]
- New research to improve production of high oleic sunflower oil [546d]
- Scientists unlock the secrets of a sixth basic flavor [546d]
- Feather-tailed possums in New Guinea were originally Aussies, according to fossil study [546d]
- Old stars don't have hot Jupiters, suggests study [546d]
- TikTok may help farmers cultivate empathy around climate change [546d]
- Scientist adds cryo-ET and biosensors to fluorescence microscopy to image proteins within cells [546d]
- Discovery may enable network interface for quantum computers [546d]
- Mukbang influencer marketing and consumer engagement with food brands [546d]
- Little-known beaked whale found in cold waters off Hokkaido [546d]
- Scientists discover the highest energy gamma-rays ever from a pulsar [546d]
- The medicine of the future could be artificial life forms [546d]
- Climate intervention technologies may create winners and losers in world food supply [546d]
- Survival of the newest: The mammals that survive mass extinctions aren't as 'boring' as scientists thought [546d]
- New research may make future design of nanotechnology safer with fewer side effects [546d]
- Fear of human 'super predator' pervades the South African savanna [546d]
- Nanoscale rust: The future of magnets? [546d]
- Novel organic-inorganic semiconductor generates circularly polarized light [546d]
- Successful morphing of inorganic perovskites without damaging their functional properties [546d]
- Oldest evidence of human cannibalism as a funerary practice [546d]
- Renewable energy through photo-electrochemistry [546d]
- Non-native plants migrate north as climate change advances, study finds [546d]
- Scientists develop microplastics detection kit with AI technology [546d]
- New process 3D prints glass microstructures at low temperature with fast curing [546d]
- Using artificial intelligence, scientists develop self-driving microscopy technique [546d]
- Chemists create sensors to track potassium and sodium in cell organelles [546d]
- Researchers suggest paired black holes pulled by cosmic expansion could seem to be one entity [546d]
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