The Brutalist Report - science
- No new articles in the Past 12 Hours.
- Why we keep hunting ghosts—and what it says about us [95d]
- How spacefaring nations could avoid conflict on the moon [95d]
- Not hunters but collectors: The bone that challenges the 'humans wiped out Australian megafauna' theory [95d]
- Chemists discover clean and green way to recycle Teflon [95d]
- Humans evolved fastest among the apes, 3D skull study shows [95d]
- 'Messy' galaxies in the early universe struggled to settle, Webb reveals [95d]
- How screening students for psychopathic and narcissistic traits could help prevent cyberbullying [95d]
- When coal smoke choked St. Louis, residents fought back, but it took time and money [95d]
- What half a million tweets reveal about invasive species [95d]
- China's rising meat demand drives Brazilian soybean farming and resource use [95d]
- While searching for the world's oldest ice, scientists find sediment sneaking under the Antarctic ice sheet [95d]
- Geophysical-machine learning tool developed for continuous subsurface geomaterials characterization [95d]
- Targeted support boosts engagement and perseverance among repeat programming students [95d]
- Structural surprise in motor protein may point to new strategies for controlling disease [95d]
- Scenario-based method enables businesses to rank emissions-reduction strategies by cost and impact [95d]
- Do we need to see to gesture? How blind people express concepts without vision [95d]
- Phosphorus chains display true 1D electronic properties on a silver substrate [95d]
- Researchers challenge claim of a strong Yellowstone trophic cascade after wolf reintroduction [95d]
- Ideological polarization and spread of biased or fake news on Facebook are on the rise, according to study [95d]
- Global supply chains benefit most from who you know, says study [95d]
- Record-breaking carbon dioxide rise shows the Amazon is faltering, but satellite that spotted this may soon be shut down [95d]
- A novel protein may help to combat greenhouse gas emissions [95d]
- Toxic Salton Sea dust triggers changes in lung microbiome after just one week [95d]
- Ribwort plantain combined with alfalfa increases forage yield and protects groundwater in practical test [95d]
- Louvre heist: The turbulent history of the stolen royal jewels [95d]
- Magnetized plasmas offer a new handle on nanomaterial design [95d]
- An edible fungus could make paper and fabric liquid-proof [95d]
- Ultra-thin filters made from boron nitride could boost medicine and dye production [95d]
- Red light and recyclable catalysts drive sustainable photocatalysis [95d]
- How researchers are helping farmers prevent and manage livestock losses [95d]
- Smarter electrolysis: Pairing reactions for sustainable energy and chemistry [95d]
- Shanghai Tower serves as inspiration for first synthetic dynamic helical polymer [95d]
- AI can spot signs of depression in Reddit posts [95d]
- Increasing heat is super-charging Arctic climate and weather extremes [95d]
- Students help drive new research on global marine debris [95d]
- Sentinel-4 offers first glimpses of air pollutants [95d]
- Future-focused conservation index identifies reptiles as highest conservation priority [95d]
- Nanopore signals and machine learning unlock new molecular analysis tool [95d]
- Rethinking polygamy—research upends conventional thinking about the advantages of monogamous marriage [95d]
- Seismic anisotropy offers insight into viscous BLOBs at base of Earth's mantle [95d]
- Lignins' surprising order: Study finds complex plant molecules not so random after all [95d]
- Canine metabolism responds better to fat than carbs, research suggests [95d]
- New telescope opens window to southern sky [95d]
- Excess fine sediment in rivers starves fish habitats of oxygen, study finds [95d]
- Agree to disagree: Why we fear conflict and what to do about it [95d]
- Eating carrion may have made us human: The importance of scavenging in our evolution [95d]
- Even before they can read, young children are visualizing letters and other objects with the same strategies adults use [95d]
- Households' hunt for better savings rates can deepen recessions, finds new study [95d]
- First-of-its-kind research study to keep New York lakes healthy with help of herbicide [95d]
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