The Brutalist Report - science
- A radical new approach in synthetic chemistry [528d]
- Study uncovers how bacteria use ancient mechanisms to self-repair [528d]
- Tracking explosions with toughened-up tracers [528d]
- New research improves the coolness factor for athletes [528d]
- Gully erosion prediction tools can lead to better land management [528d]
- Low-cost sensor records the level of rivers [528d]
- Adapting to a hotter planet has never been more important, and progress edged forward at COP27 [528d]
- Can we protect Earth from space weather? [528d]
- NET locus regulates both flavor quality and nutrient metabolite accumulation in rice [528d]
- Scientists add 'invisible fiber' to foods for a healthier diet [528d]
- Synthetic fibers discovered in Antarctic air, seawater, sediment and sea ice [528d]
- Old World flycatchers' family tree mapped [528d]
- New technology maps movement of microscopic algae in unprecedented detail [528d]
- Do acquisitions harm the acquired brand? Identifying conditions that reduce the negative effect [528d]
- Surveys reveals five patterns in consumer responses to inflation [528d]
- Concerns raised over aspects of well-being for primary school pupils in England as resilience levels decline [528d]
- Egyptian lagoon vital to Cyprus turtles, study shows [528d]
- Machine learning tools autonomously classify 1,000 supernovae [528d]
- Mathematicians resolve a longstanding open problem for the so-called 3D Euler singularity [528d]
- NASA's Europa Clipper gets its wheels for traveling in deep space [528d]
- State of the climate: What Australians need to know about major new report [528d]
- They might not have a spine, but invertebrates are the backbone of our ecosystems. Let's help them out [528d]
- Pocket feature shared by deadly coronaviruses could lead to pan-coronavirus antiviral treatment [528d]
- Opinion: The criminal justice system is retraumatizing victims of violent crime [528d]
- Why do kids bully? And what can parents do about it? [528d]
- Cooking in caves: Research reveals sophisticated prehistoric culinary habits [528d]
- Mathematical theorem used to crack US government encryption algorithm [528d]
- A Republican bubble? How pollsters and pundits got the US midterms so wrong [528d]
- Researchers reveal effects of defects on electron emission property of graphene electrodes [528d]
- Texas Comptroller asks feds to consider energy industry in endangered bat listing [528d]
- Ancient Roman coins thought to be fakes now authenticated [529d]
- Witchcraft beliefs are widespread, highly variable around the world [529d]
- Exeter tops Britain's city centers for 'greenness,' while Glasgow comes in last [529d]
- How is climate change affecting the US? The government is preparing a nearly 1,700 page answer. [529d]
- Europe's space agency picks first disabled astronaut recruit [529d]
- NASA program predicted impact of small asteroid over Ontario, Canada [529d]
- Study shows changing population and income patterns in rural Mountain West [529d]
- Captive lyrebirds lose their culture [529d]
- European Space Agency names new astronauts, agrees record budget [529d]
- In the UK, concern about climate change grows [529d]
- Facial recognition can help conserve seals, scientists say [529d]
- Pandemic spike in social cohesion starting to decline in Australia, survey finds [529d]
- NASA's IXPE helps solve black hole jet mystery [529d]
- Study provides insights into how microbiome community and metabolic functions may couple with fig-wasp mutualism [529d]
- Submerged macrophyte biodiversity buffers impact of eutrophication stress on ecosystem functioning [529d]
- Transporting of two-photon quantum states of light through a phase-separated Anderson localization optical fiber [529d]
- Study links heavy rainfall decline to drought [529d]
- Farthest galaxy candidate yet known discovered by James Webb Space Telescope [529d]
- Genome studies uncover a new branch in fungal evolution [529d]
- Water wars: Causes and possible solutions [529d]
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