The Brutalist Report - science
- No new articles in the last 24 hours.
- Hurricane Norma downgraded to Category 2 ahead of Mexico landfall [531d]
- The first Miocene fossils from coastal woodlands in the southern East African Rift [531d]
- COVID-19-related jail decarceration did not affect crime in California, study suggests [531d]
- Soft, living materials made with algae glow under stress [531d]
- Dingoes given 'almost-human' status in pre-colonial Australia, archaeological study finds [531d]
- Challenging prehistoric gender roles: Research finds that women were hunters, too [531d]
- Does urbanization trigger plant evolution? [531d]
- Analysis reveals that harsh workplace climate is pushing women out of academia [531d]
- Researchers peer into the black box of airline pricing and find some surprises [531d]
- UN nuclear agency team watches Japanese lab workers prepare fish samples from damaged nuclear plant [531d]
- Revolutionizing radar: Integrated THz emitter for precise rotating target detection [531d]
- Soil carried on sea freight loaded with dangerous pests and diseases: Study [531d]
- Predicting potential problems of persistent plastic particulates [531d]
- Study finds mainstream Christians and non-religious equally likely to use online pornography [531d]
- Why you should count your chickens (and kookaburras, lorikeets or other backyard birds) [531d]
- New study unveils breakthrough in forest fire detection despite environmental changes [531d]
- NASA's Voyager team focuses on software patch, thrusters [531d]
- Juno completes its closest flyby of Io yet [531d]
- There are 14,000 potentially hazardous city-killing asteroids left to find [531d]
- Scientists develop model to predict endocrine disruption by environmental contaminants in seals [531d]
- NASA's innovative rocket nozzle paves way for deep space missions [531d]
- Larger-scale recycling collections of currently neglected plastic types can deliver economic viability [531d]
- New data show employee owned businesses deliver an 8 to 12% productivity boost [531d]
- How free-roaming cats impact wildlife, disease transmission [531d]
- Most people would welcome more trees and wildflower meadows in their townscapes, UK survey finds [531d]
- Q&A: The rise of younger, less experienced bosses in the workplace [531d]
- Plants in the Cerrado combine at least two strategies to survive fire, study shows [531d]
- Science lessons across Europe come to life through a push towards 'open schooling' [531d]
- Insights for crop breeding in the face of climate change [531d]
- China's 'Great Green Wall' boosts carbon sink, study finds [531d]
- Sable Island's shifting landscape offers insights into groundwater loss globally [531d]
- Assessing organohalogen contamination impact on the health of Baltic Atlantic salmon [531d]
- At the foreshore of sustainable fishing: A new tool to tackle seafood fraud [531d]
- Safely removing nanoplastics from water using 'Prussian blue', a pigment used to dye jeans [531d]
- NZ's always-on culture has stretched the 8-hour workday—should the law contain a right to disconnect? [531d]
- Namibia and Angola's remote Ovahimba mountains reveal a haven for unique plants—new survey [531d]
- Opinion: Education is the responsibility of the state—care of young children should be too [531d]
- Collectively, we spend only 45 minutes daily on the activities that produce the most pollution, researchers say [531d]
- New 'healing' prison in Ireland points to long history of progressive penal reform [531d]
- Rancid food smells and tastes gross—AI tools may help scientists prevent that spoilage [531d]
- New class of recyclable polymer materials could one day help reduce single-use plastic waste [531d]
- Some kids with reading difficulties can also have reading anxiety—what can parents do? [531d]
- New study shows Hunga-Tonga Hunga-Ha'apai eruption depleted ozone layer [531d]
- Why some worms regenerate and others do not [531d]
- Loss of plant biodiversity can reduce soil carbon sequestration in grasslands, suggests global study [531d]
- Nanocarriers study shows antibodies against polyethylene glycol in 83% of the German population [531d]
- How cord-like aggregates of bacteria lead to tuberculosis infections [531d]
- Wobbly gel mat trains muscle cells to work together [531d]
- Sustainable cosmetics: Harnessing cyanobacteria for natural active ingredients [531d]
- Realizing vertical ultraviolet-B semiconductor laser diodes for high optical output [531d]
- Researchers develop novel data representation for transcription factor-binding sequences [531d]
- Dinuclear ruthenium complex as a photocatalyst for selective CO2 reduction to CO [531d]
- Deadly Storm Babet batters Scotland and Scandinavia [531d]
- Why 10 billion snow crabs starved to death in the Bering Sea [531d]
- Land use change can produce more food and store more carbon, study finds [531d]
- New research finds marine bacteria ditched their flagella and other traits when migrating back to the ocean [531d]
- Accelerating waves shed light on major problems in physics [531d]
- Study results indicate organophosphorus flame retardants induce malformations in avian embryos [531d]
- Study shows maternal microbiota can affect fetal development [531d]
- Broad-spectrum antiviral candidate targets dengue and SARS-CoV-2 [531d]
- Optimizing cytochrome P450 network for high-level production of quillaic acid [531d]
- Further evidence of Earth's core leaking found on Baffin Island [531d]
- Researchers demonstrate a high-speed electrical readout method for graphene nanodevices [531d]
- A strategy for the spin-acoustic control of silicon vacancies in a 4H silicon carbide-based bulk acoustic resonator [531d]
- Thai government pledges action as Bangkok pollution spikes [531d]
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