The Brutalist Report - science
- Climate change killed 40 million Australian mangroves in 2015. Here's why they'll probably never grow back [832d]
- Ultra-fast fashion charms young despite damaging environment [832d]
- Deadly elephant virus stalks Zurich zoo [833d]
- When Russia leaves, what's next for the International Space Station? [833d]
- Study: Climate change made UK heat wave hotter, more likely [833d]
- Octopus lures from the Mariana Islands found to be oldest in the world [833d]
- Inefficient building electrification risks prolonging fossil fuel use [833d]
- No 'safe space' for 12 key ocean species on North American West Coast [833d]
- Changing the perspective on the origin of enzymatic catalytic power [833d]
- Researchers track movement of charred detritus dispersed from Goleta Beach after 2018 debris flow in California [833d]
- Researchers take first-ever cryo-EM images of nitrogenase in action [833d]
- Crustaceans help to fertilize seaweeds, study finds [833d]
- A new study gives an important understanding of how molecular motor proteins are involved in malaria transmission [833d]
- Americans' distrust in institutions and one another is fueling cynicism. Is it all bad? [833d]
- W. Mediterranean hit by 'exceptional' heatwave: experts [833d]
- Gorgosaurus sells for $6.1 mn at New York auction [833d]
- Russia says it is leaving the International Space Station program. What does that mean? [833d]
- New bioremediation material can clean 'forever chemicals' [833d]
- Reconstructing volcanic eruptions to help scientists predict climate risks [833d]
- Climate change exposes growing gap between weather we've planned for—and what's coming [833d]
- C-level executives can advance job prospects through personal branding on social media, study shows [833d]
- A novel permeable reactive barrier for in-situ groundwater remediation [833d]
- New copper coating could be the next superbug fighter [833d]
- Uncontrolled debris from Chinese space rocket could crash back to Earth as soon as Saturday [833d]
- Data from elephant seals reveal new features of 'the Blob' marine heatwave [833d]
- Balloon fleet senses earthquakes from stratosphere [833d]
- Bumblebees appear to feel pain [833d]
- Promising evidence of deuterium forming into a metallic state at high pressure [833d]
- Levels of 'forever chemicals' reaching Antarctica have been increasing [833d]
- Costs of amphibian and reptile invasions exceeded US$17 billion between 1986 and 2020 [833d]
- Researchers discover sophisticated mechanism that bacteria use to resist antibiotics [833d]
- Scientists discover new 'origins of life' chemical reactions [833d]
- New method of controlling qubits could advance quantum computers [833d]
- Moving sea otters up the Northern California and Oregon coast is feasible, federal government concludes [833d]
- Asphalt identified as source for non-degradable carbon and sulfur compounds in the ocean [833d]
- Examination of recently discovered wreck from the 17th century [833d]
- AlphaFold predicts structure of almost every catalogued protein known to science [833d]
- Improved model for the mass distribution of galaxy cluster SMACS J0723.3−7327 based on Webb telescope image [833d]
- Exploring the origin of 'black widow' pulsars [833d]
- New customer behaviours are key to developing circular economy, report finds [833d]
- Mexico: New research shows the link between opening schools and falling murder rates [833d]
- Climate change could be making it harder for seabirds to feed, study finds [833d]
- Chip-scale metamicroscope for high-performance imaging [833d]
- Sneaky black hole discovery sheds light on star death, black hole formation and gravitational waves [833d]
- Half of all Australians will be victims of technology-facilitated abuse, new research finds [833d]
- Support for abortion went up after Roe v. Wade was overturned, report says [833d]
- How forests lost 8,000 years of stored carbon in a few generations [833d]
- Scientists engineer dna 'receipt book' to store cells' history [833d]
- AI tackles the challenge of materials structure prediction [833d]
- Readying spacecraft to surf Venus' atmosphere [833d]
- How to fight Fido's boredom when it's too hot for walks [833d]
- Butanol in latex paint detected by mass spectrometry technology [833d]
- New abortion laws face COVID-19 and resourcing hurdles [833d]
- NOAA tool now brings disaster risk, vulnerability down to community level [833d]
- Video: 'Mapping' the body with single-cell RNA sequencing [833d]
- Speed limits for quantum phenomena have been extended to macro-sized objects [833d]
- A key process in asymmetric cell division preserves the immortality of the germline [833d]
- Half of Australians will experience technology-facilitated abuse in their lifetimes [833d]
- A triple meteoric spectacle is set to grace Australia's skies this weekend [833d]
- Invasive species' success may lie in living fast, dying young [833d]
- Astronomers investigate star cluster KMHK 1762 in the Large Magellanic Cloud [833d]
- New estimation method achieves optimal forecasts when market experiences structural breaks [833d]
- Soil abounds with life and supports all life above it. But Australian soils need urgent repair [833d]
- Artificial light at night can change the behaviour of all animals, not just humans [833d]
- Research reveals where carbon storage in soils has the most potential [833d]
- Performance of crop-boosting bacteria may depend on delivery method [833d]
- Acoustics researchers develop novel underwater carpet cloak [833d]
- How Wikipedia influences judicial behavior [833d]
- Ten racetrack fence types at increased odds of a fall for horse and rider [833d]
- Not just bread and beer: Microbes can ferment carbon dioxide to make fuel too [833d]
- Mapping electric fields to help unravel how enzymes work [833d]
- To build sustainable cities, involve those who live in them [833d]
- How the circadian cycle affects the response to drugs in plants [833d]
- Tiger sharks return to nurseries, new study finds [833d]
- New model harnesses supercomputing power for more accurate flood simulations [833d]
- PIP-II transportation test frame is ready for action at Fermilab [833d]
- A majority of people around the world are concerned about climate change, says poll [833d]
- A nanokelvin microwave freezer for molecules [833d]
- Intracellular nanothermometer has unprecedented versatility [833d]
- Early exposure to fluctuating water availability can promote plant resilience [833d]
- Heat waves thawing Arctic permafrost [833d]
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