The Brutalist Report - science
- Sulfur may be a new tool for finding alien life [356d]
- 10 new sponge species discovered in Hawaii's Kāne'ohe Bay [356d]
- Novel carbon-based materials can remove hazardous 'forever chemicals' in water [356d]
- Fossil study reveals that palm trees once thrived in subarctic Canada [356d]
- Bacteria on marine particles play key role in ocean nitrogen cycle [356d]
- Researchers make progress in high-temperature thermally sensitive ceramics [356d]
- Proactively exposing ecosystems to mild environmental stressors offers protection, study finds [356d]
- Cloud cover decline may be driving Earth's record temperatures [356d]
- NASA sends experiment to space to study antibiotic-resistant bacteria [356d]
- Research looks at how climate is affecting public transportation [356d]
- Germanium detectors help physicists unlock the mysteries of the universe [356d]
- Desert plants' clever survival trick: Two dormancy cycles a year ensure survival in harsh conditions [356d]
- Ultrafast vortex electron diffraction: A new way to observe electrons in motion [356d]
- Blockchain technology could bring benefits to the auditing industry [356d]
- Chlorine plus UV light can detoxify water affected by harmful algae blooms [356d]
- Did Twitter favor tweets from right-wing politicians? International study ends prematurely in 2023 [356d]
- Friend-enemy divided thinking can ignite flames of conflict [356d]
- Government suspicion, conspiratorial thinking linked to historical harm in three communities, report finds [356d]
- Team conflict at work can boost creativity, but it depends on the 'fighters' as much as the fights [356d]
- Community helps drive brand loyalty, according to research [356d]
- CRISPR manipulation of UFO gene reveals complex plant flowering dynamics [356d]
- Disrupting parasite gene regulation reveals new malaria intervention strategy [356d]
- Blocking plant immune responses gives colonizing bacteria a competitive advantage [356d]
- Alaska's lakes and ponds reveal effects of permafrost thaw [356d]
- We can farm more seafood while minimizing its impact on biodiversity, research shows [356d]
- Study reveals link among religion, sociocultural norms, and menstrual stigma for adolescent girls [356d]
- Adult great apes show enhanced memory for social events [356d]
- SpaceX debris enters atmosphere over Poland: agency [356d]
- Blueback herring make a robust return as an urbanized waterway recovers [356d]
- New Australian dinosaurs and the oldest megaraptorid fossils in the world [356d]
- What is quantum coherence? [356d]
- Enhancing shareholder accountability: Lessons from Japan's corporate governance reforms [356d]
- Rare trio of weak bosons observed at Large Hadron Collider [356d]
- Mountain ranges could be hidden treasure troves of natural hydrogen, plate tectonic modeling finds [356d]
- In Denmark, rural cat owners are neutering their cats and allowing them indoor access [356d]
- Could the ocean have a climate solution in store? [356d]
- Feed additives can reduce campylobacter in free-range broilers [356d]
- Grain dust explosions in 2024: Steady incidents, fewer injuries reported [356d]
- Urban environments promote adaptation to multiple stressors in aquatic species [356d]
- A national resource for managing qualitative data across the social sciences [356d]
- Storing CO₂ underground in Switzerland [356d]
- Investors value corporate tax responsibility when the company is based somewhere with a lot of inequality [356d]
- Greenland's rapidly melting ice and landslide-prone fjords make the oil and minerals Trump covets dangerous to extract [356d]
- Human flesh does a body good? Cannibalism as medicine in Medieval Europe [356d]
- Baboons and human fear: A deep history behind the cruel attacks in South Africa [356d]
- California prison resentencing project yields modest results [356d]
- Climate change is threatening Lake Ontario. Lessons from the Little Ice Age show us why we need to adapt [356d]
- Devastating storms define Appalachia's 2024 climate [356d]
- The beauty standard is intensifying. At what cost? [356d]
- Dangers of 'Jekyll and Hyde leadership': Why making amends after workplace abuse can hurt more than it helps [356d]
- Inclusive workplaces can empower black employees to thrive, study shows [356d]
- Six tips on how to run a company in turbulent times: Lessons from emerging markets [356d]
- How to protect more Australian homes from the growing risks of floods, fires and other climate disasters [356d]
- Minimum alcohol pricing: What we found in Wales after five years [356d]
- New report offers recommendations to help ease pressure on prisons [356d]
- How banks, lawyers and lobbyists in the west help post-communist kleptocrats stay rich [356d]
- Population panic: How demography is used for political gain [356d]
- A spiral structure in the inner Oort cloud [356d]
- What would actual scientific study of UAPs look like? [356d]
- How plants remember stress without a brain [356d]
- Police failing to deliver a minimum standard of service, according to the UK public [356d]
- Here's why increasing productivity in housing construction is such a tricky problem to solve [356d]
- Life on Mars? It probably looks like something you'd find in your stomach [356d]
- Civics education is at an all-time low in Australia. Mapping our 'civic journeys' may help [356d]
- Vibes are something we feel but can't quite explain. Now researchers want to study them [356d]
- Yes, Australia needs new homes—but they must be built to withstand disasters in a warmer world [356d]
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