The Brutalist Report - science
- No new articles in the last 24 hours.
- Low-intensity fires reduce wildfire risk by 60%, according to study [645d]
- Unlocking the secrets of spin with high-harmonic probes [645d]
- NASA's Mars fleet will still conduct science while lying low [645d]
- Experiments launching aboard SpaceX-29 will help humans go farther and stay longer in space [645d]
- Divergent mechanisms of reduced growth performance in Betula ermanii saplings from high-altitude and low-latitude range [645d]
- The governance gap: Balancing innovation and ecological responsibility in a world at risk [645d]
- Yucatán's underwater caves host diverse microbial communities [645d]
- Hera asteroid mission completes acoustic testing [645d]
- Study finds link between school desegregation and midlife cognitive function [645d]
- Preparation of F-passivated ZnO for quantum dot photovoltaics [645d]
- Q&A: How can cities fight climate change and still stay within legal guardrails? [645d]
- A close-up, on-the-ground view of Europe's next-generation satellites [645d]
- Research counters 'confidence gap' stereotype for women entrepreneurs [645d]
- Found at last: Bizarre, egg-laying mammal finally rediscovered after 60 years [645d]
- Image: Autumn in Japan [645d]
- One step closer to unveiling dark matter with ARRAKIHS [645d]
- Climate predictions require increasingly accurate information on atmospheric particles [645d]
- Some of the moon's craters are from interstellar impacts. Can we tell which? [645d]
- Astronomers find dozens of massive stars fleeing the Milky Way [645d]
- How Einstein's daydream of light created relativity [645d]
- Is anything absolute with relativity? [645d]
- Improved algorithm enhances precision of pressure sensors for wild bird tracking [645d]
- Alaska judge sides with company on new $7.5 billion oil project [645d]
- Smashing the 'concrete ceiling': Black women are still missing from corporate leadership [645d]
- Will Saturn's rings really 'disappear' by 2025? An astronomer explains [645d]
- UN's 'global stocktake' on climate is offering a sober emissions reckoning—but there are also signs of progress [645d]
- COP28: A year after climate change funding breakthrough, poor countries eye disappointment at Dubai summit [645d]
- Ubuntu offers lessons in how to treat people with disabilities—a study of Bomvana rituals [645d]
- Q&A: Ghanaians don't trust the police—criminologist discusses what needs to be done about it [645d]
- Why more food, toiletry and beauty companies are switching to minimalist package designs [645d]
- 'Bluewashing': How ecotourism can be used against Indigenous communities [645d]
- Earth has many objects in orbit but definitely only one moon, despite what some people think [645d]
- Domestic sheep will no longer graze swath of Colorado land to protect bighorns from 'pernicious' disease [645d]
- Blue Origin's new crane at Port Canaveral: Another piece to future launch puzzle [645d]
- SpaceX shuttles science, holiday treats to astronauts Space Coast launch [645d]
- Oil companies attending climate talks have minimal green energy transition plans, AP analysis finds [645d]
- People dig deeper to fact-check social media posts when paired with someone who doesn't share their perspective: Study [645d]
- New work sheds light on inner working of cells [645d]
- Why are dead and dying seabirds washing up on Australian beaches in hundreds? [645d]
- The unsafe Safeguard Mechanism: How carbon credits could blow up Australia's main climate policy [645d]
- Overwhelmed by group chat messages? You're not alone [645d]
- Exploring how yeast cells can produce drugs for the treatment of psychotic disorders [645d]
- What exposure to radiation does to glass on the moon over billions of years [645d]
- The mystery of phosphite: A scientific detective story leads to discovery of new type of bacterial metabolism [645d]
- A reliable experimental benchmark in crystal structure prediction of pharmaceutical drugs [645d]
- In search of active substances against stress-related diseases [645d]
- Scientists find hundreds of toxic chemicals in recycled plastics [645d]
- Study concludes ocean acidification in the Mediterranean is already affecting the calcification of marine plankton [645d]
- Using bacteria to make lunar soil more fertile [645d]
- Scientists invent new method to regenerate muscle tissue [645d]
- For 20,000 years, polar bears have been retreating due to rising sea temperatures: Study [645d]
- Researchers achieve chemically controlled, reversible magnetic phase transition [645d]
- Study of wildfires in the US over 30 years shows number of houses burned has grown substantially [645d]
- A twist on atomic sheets to create new materials [645d]
- Designing cities for 21st-century weather [645d]
- Adding oxygen to a lake to explore methane emissions [645d]
- How underground fungi shape forests [645d]
- Desert birds lay larger eggs when they have more helpers, research shows [645d]
- Pioneering automated proteoform imaging [645d]
- Molecular secrets behind 'zigzag' hair patterns uncovered, offering an avenue for anti-aging solutions [645d]
- Boys choir found to compete sexually for female audiences through more energetic singing [645d]
- Dangerous bee virus less deadly in at least one US forest, researchers find [645d]
- Building coal-fired power plants 'irresponsible': US climate envoy [645d]
- Australia offers Tuvalu citizens climate refuge [645d]
- Elusive Attenborough echidna rediscovered in Indonesia [645d]
- Battle looms over renewed plastic treaty negotiations [645d]
- China's animal lovers fight illegal cat meat trade [645d]
- Deforestation in Brazilian Amazon down 22% in a year [645d]
- In a pickle: Baltic herring threatened by warming sea [645d]
- Astronaut Frank Borman, commander of the first Apollo mission to the moon, has died at age 95 [645d]
- Study: Bullying victims who feel targeted due to social characteristics may experience effects more intensely [645d]
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