The Brutalist Report - science
- Piggy in the middle: Pig aggression reduced when a bystander pig steps in [896d]
- Environmentally friendly 'biofoam' could address plastic pollution crisis [896d]
- Maryland sites are among the most polluting coal ash waste dumps in the nation, study finds [896d]
- Designing next-generation metals, one atom at a time [896d]
- Should maize farmers in sub-Saharan Africa store or sell their grain? [896d]
- Rare fossil clam discovered alive [896d]
- Anthology explores racial inequities during COVID-19 pandemic [896d]
- Artificial intelligence deciphers detector 'clouds' to accelerate materials research [896d]
- Experiments to study gravity's impact on bone cells are heading to the International Space Station [896d]
- Study finds that Americans are more likely than others to share COVID-19 misinformation online [896d]
- Researchers find that education intervention doesn't live up to its promise [896d]
- Silicon photonic microelectromechanical systems take a step forward [896d]
- Sea urchins keep on trucking while other marine life languishes in the Florida Keys [896d]
- Neuron function is altered by widely used anesthetic propofol [896d]
- Affirmative action critics paint Asian Americans as the 'model minority.' Why that's false [896d]
- Climate summit talks begin with breakthrough on loss and damage from extreme weather [896d]
- 'Death in the family': California tribe anguished as water, sacred fish vanish from rivers [896d]
- Sea turtle nesting deaths are on the rise as hot dry summer comes to an end [896d]
- Earth's oldest stromatolites and the search for life on Mars [896d]
- Shedding light on the superconductivity of newly-discovered kagome metals [896d]
- Glucose-starved yeast poisons neighboring microorganisms as well as its own clones [896d]
- The charge dynamics of a non-centrosymmetric magnetic Weyl semimetal [896d]
- Rewire financial system to aid climate-hit nations: UN chief [896d]
- PFAS levels lower in buildings with healthier furnishings [896d]
- Researchers investigate how microbes that can both eat and photosynthesize might evolve in a changing environment [896d]
- Wages trump safety standards for global apparel workers [896d]
- Exploring how Americans sought out scientific health information during the pandemic [896d]
- Geobiologists shine new light on Earth's first known mass extinction event 550 million years ago [896d]
- The secret to the skillful skydiving of wingless springtails [896d]
- Are COVID 'comas' signs of a protective hibernation state? [896d]
- In ironic twist, CRISPR system used to befuddle bacteria [896d]
- At least 15,000 killed by hot weather in Europe in 2022: WHO [896d]
- Learning from animal evolution to reproduce materials for vibration damping and acoustic wave control [896d]
- Zimbabwe launches first nano-satellite [896d]
- UN unveils global 'early warning' system for disasters at $3 billion [896d]
- Solar panel trouble on cargo capsule bound for space station [896d]
- Fearful cats also express other problematic behavior, making socialization important at early stages of life [896d]
- Smell words differ primarily in terms of pleasantness and edibility [896d]
- Chemists develop enzyme-free cholesterol testing system [896d]
- New approach extracts more data on steel alloys for materials databases [896d]
- Climate change to impact mountains on a global scale [896d]
- Entomologists issue warning about effects of climate change on insects [896d]
- Ye and Adidas break up: Why brand marriages sometimes go bad [896d]
- Fundraisers who appeal to donors' fond memories by evoking their emotions may get larger gifts, new research suggests [896d]
- Pickleball's uphill climb to mainstream success [896d]
- How a divided America splits on QAnon, racism and armed patrols at polling places [896d]
- Armed conflict and climate change: How these two threats play out in Africa [896d]
- Girls are held up as figureheads of political change, but they don't want to do it alone [896d]
- Microbiologist discusses widespread impacts of bird flu in the UK [896d]
- US sexually 'teased' its troops in the First World War to make them fight harder, historian claims [896d]
- Beer hops compounds could help protect against Alzheimer's disease [896d]
- COP27: Five things to expect from this year's UN climate summit [896d]
- Many private landlords in the UK lack the knowledge, skills and support needed to provide decent homes for renters [896d]
- New international study concludes digital media can fuel polarization and populism [896d]
- Hazardous flame retardant OPEs detected at higher levels than BFRs at an informal end-of-life vehicle recycling site [896d]
- New quasiparticle discovered in moiré patterns [896d]
- The last eight years are on track to be the warmest on record, even with a triple dip La Niña [896d]
- Q&A: Climate compensation for poorer countries must top agenda at COP27 [896d]
- When black holes collide they also produce neutrinos [896d]
- What happens to hot Jupiters when their star becomes a red giant? [896d]
- Climate change is causing endangered African wild dogs to give birth later, threatening the survival of the pack [896d]
- Koalas, parrots, frogs and orchids share our cities. It's key to protect each one's habitat, not just 30% of all land [896d]
- Early planetary migration can explain missing planets [896d]
- Study highlights the complexity of dryland dynamics under a changing climate [896d]
- Microplastic pollution threatens the world's coastal lagoons [896d]
- COP27: Climate finance needs more transparency [896d]
- Automatic voter reregistration can substantially boost turnout [896d]
- We are running out of time to pass the Recovering America's Wildlife Act [896d]
- Measuring sunlight from space, on a chip [896d]
- A clever method for separating nano-components [896d]
- Low-loss, chip-scale programmable silicon photonic processor [896d]
- Hubble inspects two galaxies connected by a luminous bridge [896d]
- Erbium atoms in silicon: A prime candidate for quantum networks [896d]
- Understanding rogue waves of the Eastern Mediterranean Sea [896d]
- Farmers in China and Uganda move to high-yielding, cost-saving perennial rice [896d]
- Working with mountain communities could help water systems adapt to climate [896d]
- Climate change will force up to 113 million people to relocate within Africa by 2050—new report [896d]
- COP27: Which countries will push to end fossil fuel production? And which won't? [896d]
- New venomous snakes discovered in Colombia: Taxonomic classification facilitates medical help in case of snakebites [896d]
- Seeing clearly into a new realm—researchers prototype a new generation of quantum microscopy [896d]
- Community-based economic development is the key to a strong pandemic recovery [896d]
- Genetic analysis of Neolithic people from Mesopotamia shows blend of demographics [896d]
- Study unveils the compositions and origins of global airborne bacteria on Earth [896d]
- A Canadian senator aims to end the widespread financial backing of fossil fuels [896d]
- Games of power: Scientists decode behavioral patterns of dominance between the sexes in mammals [896d]
- Has the modern world discovered the ancient truths of Buddhism or simply invented a new version? [896d]
- How winning $1.5 billion Powerball jackpot could still lead to bankruptcy [896d]
- Wounded whale washes ashore in northern France [896d]
- Indigenous crops may help us survive climate change, but how we talk about them matters [896d]
- World risks 'collective suicide', UN chief warns climate summit [896d]
- Why only some voters have climate change on the brain this November [896d]
- Novel protein helps regulate cholesterol production [896d]
- Student-led dinosaur excavation culminates in airlift [896d]
- Research advances artificial enzyme engineering [896d]
- New model for reproduction of E. coli bacteria [896d]
- A technologically advanced society is choosing to destroy itself. It's both fascinating and horrifying to watch [896d]
- Researchers develop hierarchically self-assembled homochiral helical microtoroids [896d]
- Personality influenced college students' romantic relationships during the pandemic, study finds [896d]
- New radio-loud high-redshift quasar discovered [896d]
- Atmosphere of excitement as Europe's JWST astronomers study climate on other planets [896d]
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