The Brutalist Report - science
- Modern tattooers meet their ancient match with the ice mummies of Siberia [184d]
- Seismic activity on the moon could pose risk to long-term lunar infrastructure [184d]
- Study outlines alternative approach to detecting inelastic dark matter particles [184d]
- Massive sea turtle returns to the ocean off Florida after treatment for a boat strike [184d]
- Lavender steps up as a natural preservative in skin-care emulsions [184d]
- Borderline democracy? How Polish voters tolerated restrictions of civil liberties to address immigration crisis [184d]
- Gulf of Maine sees rising pH, defying expectations of increasing ocean acidity [184d]
- Turkish city calls for help after heat tops 50C [184d]
- Researchers develop flexible fiber material for self-powered health-monitoring sensors [184d]
- Study reveals importance of culture in intimate partner violence recovery [184d]
- Tech tool offers improved assurances for small business contracts [184d]
- Neighborhood watch: Why closely related tropical animals live together [184d]
- Why do corporations act against the public interest? We may have the answers, and it's not just greed [184d]
- Safety trumps luxury: Tourist priorities redefined [184d]
- Genetic rescue reduces harmful mutations in Florida panthers without erasing local ancestry [184d]
- A new open-source program for quantum physics helps researchers obtain results in record time [184d]
- Gradual vs. sudden collapse: What magnets teach us about climate tipping points [184d]
- Why the Pacific tsunami was smaller than expected: A geologist explains [184d]
- US government may be abandoning the global climate fight, but new leaders are filling the void, including China [184d]
- Measurements suggest we inhale 68,000 lung-penetrating microplastics daily in our homes and cars [184d]
- How cumulative heat exposure affects students' cognitive performance [184d]
- Instagram images could influence public opinion on certain major events [184d]
- Breaking bilateral symmetry: The unusual head of a fish and the puzzle of its genes [184d]
- NASA-ISRO satellite lifts off to track Earth's changing surfaces [184d]
- Water recycling is paramount for space stations and long-duration missions [184d]
- Simulations prove early Earth's liquid core generated protective magnetic field [184d]
- Tracking deep space probes with GEO satellites improves uptime [184d]
- Russia's Far East 'land of fire and ice' avoids major damage from earthquake and tsunami [184d]
- Volcano erupts after quake in Russia's far east [184d]
- Liquid droplets trained to play tic-tac-toe [184d]
- Portugal gains control of some wildfires [184d]
- Radar satellite launched by India and NASA will track miniscule changes to Earth's land and ice [184d]
- Unearthed teeth reveal human diversity in China during Middle Pleistocene [184d]
- He said, she said—how misinformation clouds the memory of accuser and accused in sexual assault cases [184d]
- EU urged to act on forests' faltering absorption of carbon [184d]
- Physicists still divided about quantum world, 100 years on [184d]
- Hammerheads prefer a shark-eat-shark diet [184d]
- Shanghai evacuates 283,000 people as typhoon hits [184d]
- Biochar improves soil health for cotton production, study confirms [184d]
- Deepest-known animal communities found nearly 10 km below sea in Mariana Trench [184d]
- Engineered enzyme enables precise assembly of single-handed complex molecules [184d]
- Huge quake off Russia sparks Pacific tsunamis [184d]
- Webb reveals more than one star contributes to the irregular shape of planetary nebula NGC 6072 [184d]
- Too many male zoo animals may threaten endangered species conservation efforts [184d]
- Two new solutions presented for coral protection: A conductive biopaste and a natural healing patch [184d]
- Biologists solve long-standing mystery of how crickets sing [184d]
- To better detect chemical weapons, materials scientists are exploring new technologies [184d]
- Programmable nanospheres unlock nature's 500-million-year-old color secrets [184d]
Previous Day