The Brutalist Report - science
- Three endangered species tied to Georgia are now extinct, feds say [340d]
- SpaceX launch equals Space Coast record for the year [340d]
- Baby birds hatch with ability to mimic mom [340d]
- Superlensing without a super lens: Physicists boost microscopes beyond limits [340d]
- Collaborative study focuses on using computer algorithms to find molecular adaptations to improve COVID-19 drugs [340d]
- India plans manned Moon mission, space station [340d]
- 10% of dolphins killed as Amazon drought hits lake: study [340d]
- Reef-devouring predator survives coral bleaching and feasts on the survivors [340d]
- New method may accurately identify body fluids at crime scenes [340d]
- Can planting multiple crops in the same plot improve agricultural production and sustainability? [340d]
- Marine mammal longevity study reveals remarkable advances in animal welfare [341d]
- Familiarity breeds contempt for moral failings, research suggests [341d]
- SEC insider trading rule has loopholes, says study [341d]
- Study reveals surprising insights into dog sterilization, obesity [341d]
- Dogs prefer food over toys, according to study [341d]
- Results are in for novel rhythm program giving preschoolers a 'brain boost' [341d]
- New dating of cave art reveals history of Puerto Rican people [341d]
- In 2020, 30% of the Pantanal was burned to cinders by wildfires [341d]
- Accounting is facing a labor crisis. Could fraud be part of the solution? [341d]
- SpaceX launch today would equal Space Coast record for the year [341d]
- A potentially improperly zoned, foul-smelling plant in southwest Dallas is shutting down [341d]
- First-of-its-kind hiking permit may be required in Colorado's gorgeous Blue Lakes [341d]
- Federal grants for pollution remediation increase property values around the Great Lakes [341d]
- NASA September 2023 temperature data shows continued record warming [341d]
- Geospatial technology can help corn producers assess potential wind damage in fields [341d]
- Cracking the code of 2022's unprecedented heat waves and droughts [341d]
- Beyond borders: Engaging high school youth internationally in research-based life sciences learning [341d]
- Researchers test seafloor fiber optic cable as an earthquake early warning system [341d]
- Study examines role of working memory, cognitive functions in English learners learning to write [341d]
- Ocean circulation, ice melt and increasing tourism could all be contributing to Arctic microplastics [341d]
- The earthworm effect: Unraveling soil weathering dynamics [341d]
- Study examines how religious faith bolsters family hope and unity [341d]
- A simulation to visualize the evolution of Alpine ice cover over the last 120,000 years [341d]
- Scientifically, efficiently and cost-effectively treating wastewater generated from anaerobic digestion [341d]
- Up to a billion birds collide with glass buildings every year, but architecture has solutions [341d]
- Insights into 2D materials from international collaboration [341d]
- Study finds social media photos may drive new customers away [341d]
- Study demonstrates antimicrobial action of polyalthic acid from copaiba oil [341d]
- Cocoa pods—a source of chocolate, and potentially, flame retardants [341d]
- NASA's Lucy spacecraft continues approach to asteroid Dinkinesh [341d]
- Researchers predict thermal conductivity and heat flow distribution at core-mantle boundary [341d]
- Study shows beavers had a big influence on how people in the Stone Age lived [341d]
- Machine learning provides a clearer window into ocean motion [341d]
- New photonic chips for high-capacity data transmissions [341d]
- Protostars can siphon material from far away, says study [341d]
- Multi-drug resistant strain of E. coli battles bacteria in healthy gut [341d]
- Agronomists protect plants from heavy metals with hormone therapy and the mineral zeolite [341d]
- Economists propose algorithm for flexible management of innovative enterprise for sustainable development [341d]
- Gig economy, cost of living crisis, housing hostility: Young Australians are feeling worse off than their parents [341d]
- Nearly half as many people are launching businesses compared to 20 years ago, finds Canadian study [341d]
- Sustainable smart agriculture with a biodegradable soil moisture sensor [341d]
- Study suggests potential role of hybridization and polyploidization in species range expansion [341d]
- Study combines drones with GPS tracking to survey feral pig abundance and density [341d]
- What extreme fire seasons, and 2,500 years of forest history, tell us about the future of wildfires in the West [341d]
- How smaller businesses can become net-zero influencers and enablers [341d]
- Tornadoes in the UK are surprisingly common and no one knows why [341d]
- Researchers: Traditional farming knowledge should be stored for future use. The technology to do this is available [341d]
- Opinion: The World Bank and the IMF need to keep reforming to become fit for purpose [341d]
- We landed a camera on Venus before seeing parts of our own oceans—time to ramp up observations closer to home [341d]
- Four affordable housing strategies that are working in Canada [341d]
- Could 'marine cloud brightening' reduce coral bleaching on the Great Barrier Reef? [341d]
- Five tips for a sustainable Halloween [341d]
- The brumby debate will never be settled until we face the role horses played in colonization, researcher says [341d]
- Saltwater crocodiles are slowly returning to Bali and Java. Can we learn to live alongside them? [341d]
- Study investigates lions' interactions with humans in a diminishing habitat [341d]
- Decontamination method zaps pollutants from soil [341d]
- Art with DNA—digitally creating 16 million colors by chemistry [341d]
- Scientists develop deep learning-based biosensing platform to better count viral particles [341d]
- Research finds water quality in Gulf of Mexico improves when adding social costs to carbon emissions [341d]
- Carbon dioxide pollution expected to hit new record in 2023, researchers say [341d]
- How to help save plants from extinction: Predicting their demise could keep them alive [341d]
- Hunted in New Zealand, conserved in Australia: Brushtail possum genome could help with population management efforts [341d]
- Surprising discovery about coral's resilience could help reefs survive climate change [341d]
- Unique marimo threatened by rising lake temperatures [341d]
- Tribotronics: Promising prospects in the development of new functional devices and self-powered microsystems [341d]
- Ushering in the era of light-powered 'multi-level memories' [341d]
- AI models identify biodiversity from animal sounds in tropical rainforests [341d]
- Climate network analysis helps pinpoint regions at higher risk of extreme weather [341d]
- Harnessing molecular power: Electricity generation on the nanoscale [341d]
- Orchid without pollinating bumblebee on island finds wasp, blurring orchid species boundary [341d]
- Study reveals our European ancestors ate seaweed and freshwater plants [341d]
- US groundwater is getting saltier—what that means for infrastructure, ecosystems, and human health [341d]
- Ancient Egypt had far more venomous snakes than the country today, according to new study of a scroll [341d]
- Astronomers report discovery of the closest ultrastripped supernova: SN 2021agco in UGC 3855 [341d]
- New study reveals similarities in language development between chimpanzees and humans [341d]
- How climate change could cause havoc to the extraordinary lifespans of bats [341d]
- Early Neolithic farmers arriving on the Baltic coast bucked trends and incorporated fish into their diets [341d]
- Bacteria found in desert pave the way for paint that produces oxygen while capturing carbon [341d]
- International team reveals source of largest ever marsquake recorded [341d]
- Pathogen that plagues food processing plants eradicated by blue light [341d]
- Direct imaging of sequences and locations of glycans bound to biomolecules at a single-molecule level [341d]
- Should LA care about salt in New Orleans' tap water? Yes. Here's why [341d]
- Sacramento Zoo is no longer home to chimpanzees. Here's why, and where they went [341d]
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