The Brutalist Report - science
- Study finds human noise negatively impacts cricket survival and reproduction [671d]
- New process tackles pollution on dual fronts of plastic waste and fuel emissions [671d]
- Team evaluates agricultural management practices in new nitrous oxide accounting method [671d]
- Q&A: Researcher finds immigration doesn't threaten welfare states [671d]
- Citizen science project finds that respectful boat users are rewarded with magical dolphin encounters [671d]
- Study calls for a repurposing of input subsidies to promote sustainable IPM practices [671d]
- The ecology of industrial renewal [671d]
- New eco-friendly lubricant additives protect turbine equipment, waterways [671d]
- Nanotubes, nanoparticles and antibodies detect tiny amounts of fentanyl [671d]
- Bigger brains allow cliff-nesting seagull species to survive and thrive in urban environments [671d]
- Research explores energy and land-use practices on US golf courses [671d]
- Scent sells—but the right picture titillates both eyes and nose, research finds [671d]
- Researchers say nature recovery must be integrated across all sectors to bend the curve of biodiversity loss [671d]
- Oil palm plantations are driving massive downstream impact to watershed [671d]
- Centipedes used in traditional Chinese medicine offer leads for kidney treatment [671d]
- When scientists and K-12 teachers team up, the results can be spectacular or lackluster [671d]
- Physicists arrange atoms in close proximity, paving way for exploring exotic states of matter [671d]
- For microscopic organisms, ocean currents act as 'expressway' to deeper depths, study finds [671d]
- Targeting friends to induce social contagion can benefit the world, says new research [671d]
- Mice navigating a virtual reality environment reveal that walls, not floors, define space [671d]
- Human activity is causing toxic thallium to enter the Baltic Sea, finds new study [671d]
- Nano-drugs hitching a ride on bacteria could help treat pancreatic cancer [671d]
- Coastal hurricanes around the world are intensifying faster, new study finds [671d]
- Wildfires in wet African forests have doubled in recent decades, large-scale analysis finds [671d]
- Scientists advance research of harmful PFAS chemicals and their impacts [671d]
- Artificial intelligence enhances monitoring of threatened marbled murrelet [671d]
- Research team develop porous sponge material for enhancing kidney hemostasis and repair [671d]
- Supplementing diet for farmed abalones to manipulate greenlip abalone lip and shell color [671d]
- Two small NASA satellites will measure soil moisture, volcanic gases [671d]
- Deeper understanding of malaria parasite sexual development unlocks opportunities to block disease spread [671d]
- Investigation reveals varied impact of preschool programs on long-term school success [671d]
- New sugar-based catalyst could offer a potential solution for using captured carbon [671d]
- Bioreactor processes and cryotechnologies improve active ingredient tests using human cell cultures [671d]
- Developing a tech platform for fast, robust series production of nanoparticles [671d]
- Systematic testing of natural oils on in vitro skin models [671d]
- Natural sun protection for wood floors and furniture [671d]
- Japanese aerospace company captures an actual picture of space debris [671d]
- The Great Observatory for Long Wavelengths (GO-LoW) proposal [671d]
- Fluidic telescope (FLUTE): Enabling the next generation of large space observatories [671d]
- Pulsed plasma rocket (PPR): Shielded, fast transits for humans to Mars [671d]
- The people who are most active on social media are also the most active offline, shows study [671d]
- Scientists' new approach in fight against counterfeit alcohol spirits [671d]
- International team cracks genomic code for earliest forms of terrestrial plant life [671d]
- Kenya, Tanzania brace for cyclone as heavy rains persist [671d]
- Kids study in overheated slum as Philippines shuts schools [671d]
- Life's insiders: Decoding endosymbiosis with mathematics [671d]
- The COVID-19 pandemic changed our patterns and behaviors, which in turn affected wildlife [671d]
- A clock in the rocks: What cosmic rays tell us about Earth's changing surface and climate [671d]
- Millions of young people will head to the polls over the next year—but many are disillusioned about mainstream politics [671d]
- For the ancient Maya, cracked mirrors were a path to the world beyond [671d]
- Researcher creates optical magnetometer prototype that detects errors in MRI scans [671d]
- Good vibrations: Low-energy lasers induce atomic excitation in semiconductor materials [671d]
- Studies assess feasibility of aquaculture wastewater treatment methods [671d]
- London's runaway horses remind us that animals are workers too [671d]
- Cyberflashing is now a criminal offense—but the normalization of this behavior among young people needs to change [671d]
- Traditional corporate leadership structures are failing women in the C-suite, researchers say [671d]
- May Day 2024: Workers on a warming planet deserve stronger labor protections [671d]
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