The Brutalist Report - science
- Study reports that age is the driving force in changing how stars move within galaxies [364d]
- Newly hatched chicks can instantly recognize objects with vision, even if they've only ever experienced them by touch [364d]
- Last chance to record archaic Greek language 'heading for extinction' [364d]
- A return to roots: Lab builds its first stellarator in 50 years and opens the door for research into new plasma physics [364d]
- A new estimate of US soil organic carbon to improve Earth system models [364d]
- Researchers develop early horse osteoarthritis detection tool [364d]
- Unlocking membrane-based He/H₂ separation with AI [364d]
- New deep learning model predicts water and energy demands in agriculture with great accuracy [364d]
- Understanding flow and sound through large-scale computations [364d]
- Tourism planning as a social practice in times of change and uncertainty: Views from a troubled Latin American country [364d]
- Forensic Scientometrics—an emerging discipline to protect the scholarly record [364d]
- Can life at sea teach us to live in a more meaningful way? [364d]
- New research uses coaxial 'dish' antenna to scan for dark matter [364d]
- 'Unheard of in structural biology': New enzyme models reveal disease insights [364d]
- Scientists' urgent call: End destruction and forge a just, sustainable future [364d]
- Scientists gain insight into a buzzing spring pollinator that plays a significant role in the almond industry [364d]
- Researchers synthesize new compounds within living cells using light [364d]
- Companies ignoring climate risks get punished by markets, new study reveals [364d]
- Witchcraft trials in Norway ended in the 18th century, according to research [364d]
- AI makes smarter use of seaweed and kelp [364d]
- Researchers publish first-of-its-kind database for uranium minerals [364d]
- Transmitting entanglement between light and matter in the metropolitan network of Barcelona [364d]
- These plants evolved in Florida millions of years ago. They may be gone in decades. [364d]
- That starry night sky? It's full of eclipses [364d]
- Surprising facts and beliefs about eclipses from the medieval and Renaissance eras [364d]
- Raising the minimum wage? Study using US tax data finds more gain than pain [364d]
- Landmark advances in employment reframe the outlook for people with disabilities in post-pandemic era [364d]
- From data to decisions: AI and IoT for earthquake prediction [364d]
- Why kretek—'no ordinary cigarette'—thrives in Indonesia [364d]
- Focusing ultra-intense lasers to a single wavelength [364d]
- Solar Orbiter prepared for 'worst-case scenario' [364d]
- Report provides up-close look at pro-democracy conservatives [364d]
- Citizen scientists invited to collect data for NASA during eclipse [364d]
- Scientists use NASA data to predict solar corona before eclipse [364d]
- Classical optical neural network exhibits 'quantum speedup' [364d]
- How AI and deeper roots can help soil store more carbon [364d]
- Molecular biology technique allows for discovery of novel targets for candidate vaccines against schistosomiasis [364d]
- South Australian coastal dunes are on the march [364d]
- Not in the path of totality? You can still watch Monday's total solar eclipse online [364d]
- A total eclipse, with a partial failure: Scientific expeditions don't always go as planned [364d]
- Using one single image to realize on-orbit calibration of space camera lens distortion [364d]
- Research shows animals can live alongside humans by being experts at judging risk [364d]
- A single photon emitter deterministically coupled to a topological corner state [364d]
- Ocean forests: How 'floating' mangroves could provide a broad range of ecological and social benefits [364d]
- Catkins are flowering at different times, threatening their pollination and the wildlife that feed on them [364d]
- Why we need to rethink what we know about dust [364d]
- Myrtle rust is lethal to Australian plants. Could citizen scientists help track its spread? [364d]
- Looking to photograph a solar eclipse with your smartphone? Try these features and think about creative angles [364d]
- Tracking the virus behind India's lumpy skin cattle crisis [364d]
- How can Australia solve the math teacher shortage? It can start by training more existing teachers to teach math [364d]
- After 10 years of work, landmark study reveals new 'tree of life' for all birds living today [364d]
- Viewpoint: Fossil fuel subsidies cost Canadians a lot more money than the carbon tax [364d]
- Where are all these rogue planets coming from? [364d]
- Australia on track for unprecedented decades-long megadroughts, finds modeling study [364d]
- Scientist explores sufficiency as an overlooked strategy for protecting biodiversity [364d]
- Age as an overlooked factor in higher education DEI initiatives [364d]
- Researchers use smartphone screen to create 3D layered holographic images [364d]
- Researchers: The legal system must show more compassion to survivors of sexual abuse [364d]
- Hundreds of animals were rescued after the Black Summer bushfires, but how many actually survived? [364d]
- Sediment discovery unlocks Australia's hidden net-zero resource potential [364d]
- Variable rates of flatback turtles hatching on Western Australia's Pilbara beaches [364d]
- Researchers investigate the surface extraction of platinum catalysts in alkaline media [364d]
- School board social media lawsuits: For too long, we've sought individual solutions to a collective problem [364d]
- Researchers discover corn reduces arsenic toxicity in soil [364d]
- Characterizing social networks by the company they keep [364d]
- Researchers explain how green algae and bacteria together contribute to climate protection [364d]
- Researchers discover dual topological phases in an intrinsic monolayer crystal [364d]
- 100 kilometers of quantum-encrypted transfer [364d]
- Wound treatment hydrogel infused with amino acid kills bacteria naturally and promotes cell growth [364d]
- Botanists analyze the role of pollinators in the evolution of flowers with various sexual forms [364d]
- It's snake bite season in Georgia. What you need to know [364d]
- Totality ready: US braces for April 8 solar eclipse frenzy [364d]
- Landscape corridors can aid in fire ant spread, but the effects are transient [364d]
- NOAA researchers discover new fish species [364d]
- Temple bones in the skulls of dinosaurs and humans alike were formed by feeding habits, study suggests [364d]
- Ancient trees help to protect an endangered species [364d]
- All-cash home buyers pay 10% less than mortgage buyers, study finds [364d]
- Researchers find unusual heat resilience in tree swallows [364d]
- Physicists create new method to systematically determine efficient search strategies [364d]
- Physicist create new method to systematically determine efficient search strategies [364d]
- Study unveils a new family of quantum anomalous Hall insulators [364d]
- Novel method uses nanomechanics and machine learning for rapid bacterial viability detection [365d]
- Rattlesnakes on California's Santa Catalina Island have learned that it pays to be unusually aggressive [365d]
- Hair from tiger thought to be extinct found by conservationist on Java [365d]
- Brown bear numbers grow in Pyrenees: France [365d]
- Astronomers find 10 new millisecond pulsars in globular cluster Terzan 5 [365d]
- Spain's giant hail event worsened by marine heat waves, study finds [365d]
- New research reveals that chickens were widely raised across southern Central Asia from 400 BCE [365d]
- Hundreds of Philippine schools suspend classes over heat danger [365d]
- What to know about next week's total solar eclipse in the US, Mexico and Canada [365d]
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