The Brutalist Report - science
- Drought reduces Amazon River in Colombia by as much as 90%: report [61d]
- Orbital angular momentum monopoles discovery propels orbitronics forward in energy-efficient tech [61d]
- Ailing New Zealand butterfly collector gives away life's work [61d]
- Advanced data shed light on gravitational basins of attraction that shape the movement of galaxies [61d]
- Plan to overturn commercial whaling moratorium sinks in Peru [61d]
- Stay or go? Pacific Islanders face climate's grim choice [61d]
- 'I need to go': Floridians make final preparations for Hurricane Helene [61d]
- Return to sender: Waste stranded at sea stirs toxic dispute [61d]
- On remote Greek island, migratory birds offer climate clues [61d]
- Anti-bullying, sexual harassment resources increase in US schools but gaps remain [61d]
- First lunar farside samples from Chang'e-6 mission analyzed [61d]
- Study offers new explanation for Siberia's permafrost craters [61d]
- Climate change will lead to wetter US winters, modeling study finds [61d]
- Shedding light on a decades-old protein sorting mystery [61d]
- Advancing green chemistry: A tandem catalyst for efficient biomass conversion [62d]
- Satellite data fusion enhances the early detection of convective clouds [62d]
- Future climate change predicted to shift flood-generating mechanisms and intensify extreme flooding events [62d]
- Extreme heat impacts daily routines and travel patterns, study finds [62d]
- Building better bone grafts: Nanofibrous scaffolds to activate two main collagen receptors in bone cells [62d]
- How to save a sinking city [62d]
- Presence of bacteria in soil makes flowers more attractive to pollinators, study shows [62d]
- New method enables noninvasive plant magnetic resonance imaging [62d]
- Transforming caragana waste into nutritious ruminant feed [62d]
- Lignin-based sunscreen offers natural and high-performance UV protection [62d]
- Ultrasound technology accelerates drying of renewable cellulose nanocrystals [62d]
- Turbulent solar wind originates in the sun's corona, study shows [62d]
- New research could extend the lifetime of key carbon-capture materials [62d]
- Team is first to find invasive hydrilla plant in Canada [62d]
- Simultaneous detection of uranium isotopes and fluorine advances nuclear nonproliferation monitoring [62d]
- Millennial Black women navigate when and where to express style [62d]
- New research offers fresh hope to curb illegal orchid trafficking in Vietnam [62d]
- The unexpected role of magnetic microbes in deep-sea mining [62d]
- Dark matter could have slight interaction with regular matter, study suggests [62d]
- NASA's Artemis science instrument gets tested in moon-like sandbox [62d]
- New hazard maps may predict rust disease in loblolly pine trees [62d]
- Study finds strong link between childhood opportunities and educational attainment, earnings as a young adult [62d]
- Hubble finds that a black hole beam promotes stellar eruptions [62d]
- How the US government can stop 'churches' from getting treated like real churches by the IRS [62d]
- Grocery stores that donate expiring food instead of price discounting or discarding make higher profits, says researcher [62d]
- Citrus waste converted to biopolymers using cavitation [62d]
- Recording the cats in the hats: Veterinary scientists monitor brain activity with innovative wool caps [62d]
- A new AI model can predict substrate movement into and out of cells [62d]
- Sequencing method provides unprecedented glimpse into relationship between bacteria and their host cells [62d]
- Veterinarian gives guidance for first-time pet owner college students [62d]
- Post-election violence is possible in US, political scientist says [62d]
- Greener nanomaterials could transform how our everyday stuff is made [62d]
- The universe is smoother than the standard model of cosmology suggests. So is the theory broken? [62d]
- Airdropping vaccines to eliminate canine rabies in Texas [62d]
- Bees have irrational biases when choosing which flowers to feed on, just like human shoppers do [62d]
- Study reveals higher bioactive compound release in perilla-pickled apricots [62d]
- How old is beer? [62d]
- Scientists develop method to control timing of synthetic DNA droplet division [62d]
- Team debunks research showing Facebook's news-feed algorithm curbs election misinformation [62d]
- Quito fires coming under control after choking capital [62d]
- Model predicts 2024 tick cases in Australian pets [62d]
- Dead coral skeletons hinder reef regeneration by sheltering seaweed [62d]
- Eco-anxiety Q&A: How the IPCC's vice-chair keeps her head cool on a warming planet [62d]
- Citizens' panels help young people with special needs, disabilities make their voices heard on life-affecting policies [62d]
- Mixing it up: Hybrid work models can offer the best of both worlds for worker well-being and productivity [62d]
- Hurricanes, storms, typhoons... Is September wetter than usual? [62d]
- Scientists create model of holographic dark energy that is no longer unstable [62d]
- Nature is adapting to climate change—why aren't we? [62d]
- Balloon mission tests quantum sensor technology [62d]
- 'Extinct' snails found breeding in French Polynesia following a successful reintroduction project [62d]
- Completed experiments on International Space Station to help answer how boiling and condensation work in space [62d]
- Scientists uncover a critical component that helps killifish regenerate their fins [62d]
- Study explores what families fight about: Communication, moods, and chores [62d]
- Bulrush once kept NZ's wetlands and lakes thriving—now it could help restore them [62d]
- Struggling to make decisions at work? Learn how to build confidence [62d]
- 'Unsurvivable' Hurricane Helene races towards Florida [62d]
- Genetic rescue for rare red foxes? Research uncovers options to restore Lassen red fox population [62d]
- Unexpected discovery of early sweet potato cultivation in Polynesia [62d]
- Four billion years ago, but not so different: Plate tectonics likely looked closer to what we experience today [62d]
- Grazing zooplankton severely impacted by nanoplastic particles, researchers find [62d]
- Study unveils a novel protective mechanism in bacterial cell walls [62d]
- Aliphatic hydrocarbons on Ceres' surface found to have short lifetimes [62d]
- Closely related plants shows species use different methods to adapt to extreme environments, study shows [62d]
- Even as urban foxes get bolder, people appreciate rather than persecute them, say psychologists [62d]
- Light-controlled bioassays could diagnose diseases more easily and cost effectively [62d]
- Sea robins use leg-like fins to taste and navigate seafloor, researchers discover [62d]
- Scientists discover 'pause button' in human development [62d]
- Research shows heat, drought and fire risk are increasing in South America [62d]
- A social media platform that is actually good for democracy? [62d]
- Injecting manure into growing cover crops can cut pollution, support corn crops [62d]
- Who lives in the rainforest treetops? DNA-collecting drone provides insights [62d]
[ai]
- An edible toothpaste-based transistor [62d]
- South Florida study finds mosquito populations increased dramatically after Hurricane Irma [62d]
- Security protocol leverages quantum mechanics to shield data from attackers during cloud-based computation [62d]
- Biologists sequence proteins by pulling them through nanopores [62d]
- A method of 'look twice, forgive once' can sustain social cooperation [62d]
- NOAA shares first data from GOES-19 EXIS instrument [62d]
- How social structure influences the way people share money [62d]
- Bird study shows that grounded running styles conserve energy [62d]
- Cretaceous fireflies reveal early evolution of insect bioluminescence [62d]
- Are branch faults the 'on-ramps' that lead to great continental transform earthquakes? [62d]
- Why the gender gap in physics has been stable for more than a century [62d]
[ai]
- AI trained on evolution's playbook develops proteins that spur drug and scientific discovery [62d]
- 'Tamed' molecules for more sustainable catalysts: Chemists succeed in synthesizing a spectacular gallium compound [62d]
- Alternating currents for alternative computing with magnets [62d]
- Chesapeake Bay cleanup going in 'right direction,' thanks partly to Pennsylvania [62d]
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