The Brutalist Report - science
- Blue tit population booms with moths on the menu: Study [458d]
- Female leadership key to community 'saving itself' in unprecedented trauma, says report [458d]
- Tiny worm, giant leap: Discovery of highly specific fatty acid attachment to proteins [458d]
- New US Postal Service stamps feature iconic NASA Webb images [459d]
- Fingerprinting biomolecules with the help of sound [459d]
- Shallow soda lakes show promise as cradles of life on Earth [459d]
- New reagent improves process of making sulfur-containing compounds that may be used in medicines [459d]
- Don't blame the sharks: Research reveals why more hooked tarpon are being eaten [459d]
- Scientists warn missing Russian data causing Arctic climate blind spots [459d]
- Researcher proposes more equitable subway stations for the elderly and mobility handicapped [459d]
- The hidden impact of virtual communication for student teams [459d]
- Novel graph neural network models enhance precipitation forecasting [459d]
- Investigating the presence of environmental rare earth elements in activated sludge systems [459d]
- Sexual minority young people in Canada more likely to experience harmful police contact, finds study [459d]
- Immune cells drive sex reversal in zebrafish, a discovery that could improve treatments for female infertility [459d]
- New research examines how assumptions affect motion capture technology [459d]
- Scientists count penguins on remote sub-Antarctic island [459d]
- Endosomal stress, a newly defined organelle stress, induces inflammation via ubiquitin signaling [459d]
- Cultivating gender equality could cut corruption, research suggests [459d]
- Navigating the 'big little leap' to kindergarten [459d]
- Lawyers are rapidly embracing AI: Here's how to avoid an ethical disaster [459d]
- Study uncovers the non-isotropic nature of tropospheric delay for high-precision GNSS positioning [459d]
- Manipulated hafnia paves the way for next-generation memory devices [459d]
- Follow the salt: Connecting salt concentrations and motion in roundworms [459d]
- Study uncovers the dynamics of extreme climate events in Guangdong using satellite data [459d]
- Scientists increase the solubility of an effective antidepressant by a factor of 1,600 [459d]
- Do wolves make deer hunting over bait harder? [459d]
- Organizations in crises may benefit from jazz ensemble model [459d]
- 'Lonely' giraffe in Mexico begins long journey to new home [459d]
- Report finds 'false positive' field drug tests lead to wrongful convictions [459d]
- Peregrine Ion Trap Mass Spectrometer returns to Earth after eventful mission [459d]
- Researchers develop new plant-derived urease inhibitor to improve fertilizer performance [459d]
- Deepwater Horizon oil spill study could lead to overhaul of cleanup processes worldwide [459d]
- Astrophysicists offer theoretical proof of traversable wormholes in the expanding universe [459d]
- Prescribed burning could be making Aussie forests more flammable [459d]
- Study finds S. aureus' surface-sticking ability not evenly distributed over cell envelope [459d]
- Researchers observe tiny pseudoscorpion riding on a scorpion [459d]
- Whale calves found stealing milk from other mothers [459d]
- Study of gigantism in whales provides clues to genomic mechanism involved in tumor suppression [459d]
- Ocean biodiversity could be protected with green hydrogen byproduct, study shows [459d]
- Australian-first study examines impacts of long COVID on intimate partner violence victim-survivors [459d]
- Study of decommissioned onshore gas field highlights hydrogen storage concerns [459d]
- Wolves and elk are (mostly) welcome back in Poland and Germany's Oder Delta region, survey shows [459d]
- Study shows RNAs do work outside of cells to guide the immune system [459d]
- It is time to draw down carbon dioxide but shut down moves to play God with the climate [459d]
- Salad in space? New research says it's not a healthy choice [459d]
- Many women still live in poverty, but we can change this [459d]
- Is linking time in the office to career success the best way to get us back to work? [459d]
- Opinion: Why billionaires should take the lead and declare their own emissions-cutting targets [459d]
- Research reveals quantum topological potential in material [459d]
- Listening to racialized students is an important step toward equitable education, researcher says [459d]
- Congo's blackwater Ruki River is a major transporter of forest carbon, study shows [459d]
- 'Water bear' genomes reveal the secrets of extreme survival [459d]
- One billion people left dangerously exposed to heat stress by gaps in climate monitoring [459d]
- Scientists solve long-standing block copolymer research conundrum through polymer chain end modifications [459d]
- Scientists spin naturalistic silk from artificial spider gland [459d]
- New research sheds light on a phenomenon known as 'false vacuum decay' [459d]
- A peek into the cooking pot: Burnt food remains document 5,000-year-old food preparation [459d]
- Innovative membrane platform enables analysis 'down to a handful of gas atoms' [459d]
- Study reveals how some bacterial infections become chronic [459d]
- Student discovers 200-million-year-old flying reptile in Somerset [459d]
- Nigeria's polluted economic hub Lagos bans styrofoam, plastics [459d]
- How archaea toggle the nitrogen-uptake switch to avoid overeating [459d]
- Scientists trap krypton atoms to form one-dimensional gas [459d]
- Clusters of atmospheric rivers are costlier than expected [459d]
- Food from urban agriculture has carbon footprint six times larger than conventional produce, study shows [459d]
- How to design policies that support both aquaculture and small-scale fisheries [459d]
- Researchers develop high-efficiency carbon dioxide electroreduction system for reducing carbon footprint [459d]
- Performing complex-valued linear transformations using spatially incoherent diffractive optical networks [459d]
- Mouse study finds genetic variation determines the actions of gene regulatory factors [459d]
- Enabling distributed quantum sensors for simultaneous measurements in distant places [459d]
- Unlocking the secrets of the universe through neutrinoless double beta decay [459d]
- Scientists unravel key steps in the road to DNA repair [459d]
- CRISPR off-switches: A path towards safer genome engineering? [459d]
- Astronomers investigate the properties of a peculiar cataclysmic variable [459d]
- Fixing the cormorant disaster on the Columbia: 'How could this have come out any worse?' [459d]
- Drone chase highlights dangers to owls and breeding birds [459d]
- To make science more approachable, 'Curiosity' series takes viewers behind the scenes of scientists' lives [459d]
- Electric utilities push back on proposal to remove Eklutna River hydropower dam [459d]
- New stem cell research to take flight into space [459d]
- Bloom and bust: New study details exactly how terrible algae is for Florida's economy [459d]
- GOP state senator, environmental groups find common ground on Indiana carbon storage bill [459d]
- Colorado secures next wolf supply source from tribes in another Pacific Northwest state [459d]
- Scientists make COVID receptor protein in mouse cells [459d]
- 'The Meg' shark was actually quite thin, scientists say [459d]
- Dozens buried, three killed in southwest China landslide [459d]
- Indonesia's Mount Merapi unleashes lava as other volcanoes flare up, forcing thousands to evacuate [459d]
- Japan says 'possibility' Moon lander power can be restored [459d]
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