The Brutalist Report - science
- No new articles in the last 24 hours.
- Improving crops with laser beams and 3D printing [364d]
- Researchers find wave activity on Titan may be strong enough to erode the coastlines of lakes and seas [364d]
- Lab-grown burgers and cricket salads could be 'norm' by 2054, says UK report [364d]
- Caffeine may be a useful marker of wastewater leaks in storm drain systems [364d]
- Want to avoid Europe's tourist hordes? Try getting off the beaten track [364d]
- The fading boundary between farmers and tigers in the Himalayas [364d]
- Southern Africa drought crisis demands fresh solutions [364d]
- Students' awareness of their cognitive processes facilitates the learning of math, finds study [364d]
- Boosting the synthesis of stable sugar compounds with a novel nature-inspired approach [364d]
- Why advertisers pay more to reach viewers who watch less [364d]
- Earth's atmosphere is our best defense against nearby supernovae, study suggests [364d]
- Travelers urged to keep it local in the name of sustainable tourism [364d]
- Shepherd's graffiti sheds new light on Acropolis lost temple mystery [364d]
- Hope from an unexpected source in the global race to stop wheat blast [364d]
- Researchers investigate the impacts of space travel on astronauts' eye health [364d]
- Unlocking heart health: Advancing noninvasive monitoring in chimpanzees [364d]
- Study reveals stable soil moisture variability within fields, opens door for satellite remote sensing [364d]
- Non-native plants and animals expanding ranges 100-times faster than native species, finds new research [364d]
- NASA releases Hubble image taken in new pointing mode [364d]
- Many sports are tightening transgender policies. Can inclusion co-exist with fairness, physical safety and integrity? [364d]
- Researcher: Improving gender equality will help end violence against women, but it's only part of the puzzle [364d]
- Farmers reveal what they really think about reintroducing lynx and wolves to Britain and Ireland [364d]
- How glacier algae are challenging the way we think about evolution [364d]
- EPA has lowered the screening level for lead in soil: Here's what that could mean for households across the US [364d]
- New training programs will prepare astronauts to perform medicine while thousands of miles away from Earth [364d]
- Digital public archaeology: Excavating data from digs done decades ago and connecting with today's communities [364d]
- Electric fields boost graphene's potential, study shows [364d]
- Old drugs new tricks—novel approach shows 'enormous potential' for rapid antibiotic discovery [364d]
- Using soil bacteria to help accelerate discovery of new antibiotics [364d]
- Study reveals molecular mechanisms of somatostatin receptor 5 activation by neuropeptides and drugs [364d]
- Researchers develop platform to probe, control qubits in silicon for quantum networks [364d]
- New technology provides electrifying insights into how catalysts work at the atomic level [364d]
- When in drought: Researchers map which parts of the Amazon are most vulnerable to climate change [364d]
- Researchers create new class of materials called 'glassy gels' [364d]
- Surfing injects almost $3 billion into the Australian economy each year, research shows [364d]
- Researchers fabricate eco-friendly pesticide delivery system [364d]
- Scientists analyze record storm surges to help predict future flooding [364d]
- Study finds when companies announce earnings surprises, locals reach for their pocketbooks [364d]
- Study shows biases undermine diversity efforts in policing [364d]
- Pearl millet wins approval from honey bees and other pollinators [364d]
- Study reveals mechanisms of crystal nucleation in glass-ceramics [364d]
- New research illuminates the ecological importance of gray wolves in the American West [364d]
- Study reveals material erosion and deposition in fusion reactors [364d]
- Study finds cooperation can still evolve even with limited payoff memory [364d]
- Researchers propose a new way for signal-amplification of chemosensors by flexibly manipulating an allosteric trigger [364d]
- Upgraded advanced photon source sees first X-ray light for science [364d]
- Shining a light on mental health in the planetary science community [364d]
- Central China farmers face crop failures in 'withering' drought [364d]
- Air pollution linked to nearly 2,000 child deaths a day: Report [364d]
- Collecting sex-crazed zombie cicadas on speed: Scientists track a bug-controlling super-sized fungus [364d]
- It's summer solstice time. What does that mean? [364d]
[ai]
- Transforming inexpensive quinolines into complex drug candidates [364d]
- Generation of intense terahertz waves with a magnetic material [364d]
- Study suggests mycoviruses enhance fungicide effectiveness against plant pathogens [364d]
- Interaction with insects accelerates plant evolution, research finds [364d]
- Helping young people turn climate anxiety into climate action [364d]
- Supercooled phase transitions: Could they explain gravitational wave signals? [364d]
- 'Risks of nuclear terrorism are high and growing.' New tools, alliances, renewed focus needed, experts say [364d]
- Discovery of one-dimensional topological insulator for qubits, other technology [364d]
- Biden administration acknowledges harms of Columbia River dams on Indigenous people [364d]
- Computer modeling shows where Arizona's winter precipitation originates [364d]
- Sourcing genomically-diverse seedlings to create climate-change resilient forests brings optimism [364d]
- Roadkill a 'preventable natural disaster,' report finds [364d]
- NASA selects Lockheed Martin to build next-gen spacecraft for NOAA [364d]
- Study reveals market-ready beef cattle maintain meat quality on low-input diets for as long as 60 days [364d]
- High winds delay SpaceX launch after a switch to Cape Canaveral [364d]
- 'Critical fire conditions' continue to hamper firefighting as blazes across California grow [364d]
- Observations explore stellar content of nearby young open cluster Berkeley 59 [364d]
- The design of a photonic alloy with topological properties [364d]
- Much of the Nord Stream gas remained in the sea after 2022 explosion, finds study [364d]
- A railroad of cells: Computer simulations explain cell movement [364d]
- Javan rhino clings to survival after Indonesia poaching wave [365d]
- Landslides kill nine as Bangladesh lashed by rain [365d]
- Ohio train derailment caused chemical pollution falling to Earth's surface across the US and beyond, study reveals [365d]
- Scottish farmers damn wild beaver reintroduction policy [365d]
- For the endangered Nashville crayfish, its rebound is both good and bad news [365d]
- Ultrasound beam triggers 'nanodroplets' to deliver drugs at exactly the right spot [365d]
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