The Brutalist Report - science
- Physicists model cell migration to learn how cancer cells navigate tissue [670d]
- Researchers find that wind turbines repel bats in Finnish forests [670d]
- Effects of highly pathogenic avian influenza on canids [670d]
- Why it's crucial that scientists lend, not toss, specimens from Antarctica [670d]
- Solving a crucial bottleneck in drug discovery [670d]
- Demixing behavior of disks rotating in opposite directions can be explained by turbulent effects [670d]
- New approach to epidemic modeling could speed up pandemic simulations [670d]
- Using artificial intelligence to gain insights into personality [670d]
- How gig workers have adapted to working in isolation [670d]
- How to turn a tentacle into a foot [670d]
- Study creates new open-access database to better identify plastic pollution sources [670d]
- State of emergency declared in winter storm-battered California [670d]
- Wild weather driven by roiling Pacific, nature and warming [670d]
- When American democracy is weakened, faith in the U.S. as an ally falters [670d]
- Study explores how meaningful but unused products hinder sustainability [670d]
- 'Veggie' dinosaurs differed in how they ate their food [670d]
- Eye-tracking marketing research boosts public transportation agency's ridership [671d]
- Climate change could cause 'disaster' in the world's oceans, say scientists [671d]
- Study shows hydroponic systems as a promising method for sustainable saffron production [671d]
- After hurricanes, Florida neighborhoods see steady housing demand, wealthier residents [671d]
- Warmer climate increases Atlantic tropical storms, say cyclone researchers [671d]
- California's endangered salmon population plummets amid new threat [671d]
- Researchers detect fluoride in water with new simple color change test [671d]
- More links aren't necessarily better for hybrid nanomaterials [671d]
- Germany likely missed climate target again, activists angry [671d]
- Nature conservation needs to incorporate the human approach [671d]
- How marketers can capitalize on the power of perception to influence beliefs about brand performance [671d]
- Breakthroughs made as scientists sequence the genomes of endangered sharks [671d]
- Here today, gone tomorrow: How humans lost their body hair [671d]
- Researchers reveal how geminiviruses cause devastating disease in worldwide crops [671d]
- Consumer preferences for sustainably produced meat and meat substitutes in Japan [671d]
- Nutrients of the Changjiang river system linked to the land-use changes and climate variability [671d]
- Climate warming reduces organic carbon burial beneath oceans [671d]
- Climate risk insurance can effectively mitigate economic losses [671d]
- Enabling nanoscale thermoelectrics with a novel organometallic molecular junction [671d]
- Extensive testing shows dogs' tails are not used for stabilization [671d]
- Stem cell model allows researchers to explore the earliest stages of sex determination in mice and humans [671d]
- How climate change impacts the Indian Ocean dipole, leading to severe droughts and floods [671d]
- New type of entanglement lets scientists 'see' inside nuclei [671d]
- Microwave imaging of quasi-periodic pulsations at flare current sheet [671d]
- Rate of scientific breakthroughs slowing over time: Study [671d]
- Skimming stones? Try a heavier, curvier rock, scientists say [671d]
- Hard to bear: UK's only panda pair to return to China [671d]
- Bionic penis: Synthetic tissue restores erections in pigs [671d]
- New spectroscopy technique improves trace element detection in liquid [671d]
- High-performance visible-light lasers that fit on a fingertip [671d]
- Map of ancient ocean 'dead zones' could predict future locations, impacts [671d]
- Progress in perovskite LEDs for deep-blue light [671d]
- Best of both worlds: New elastic and durable crosslinked anion exchange membranes [671d]
- Using satellites to track groundwater depletion in California [671d]
- Hubble finds that ghost light among galaxies stretches far back in time [671d]
- A mechanically interlocked molecule that can be controlled by light [671d]
- Assessing biodiversity using only water samples [671d]
- More than 330 fish species, up to 35 new to science, found in Bolivia's Madidi National Park [671d]
- The best frontline managers' pay only reflects 0.5% of the value they create [671d]
- An opportunity provided by climate change: Soy production to increase in Europe in the future [671d]
- Better nitrogen management yields more than it costs [671d]
- Electronic bridge allows rapid energy sharing between semiconductors [671d]
- A downward spiral: When subsistence communities struggle, forests do too [671d]
- Innovation strengthens electron-triggered light emissions for quantum-based computational and communications systems [671d]
- Biochemists describe structure and function of newly discovered CRISPR immune system [671d]
- Cellular database of 200,000 images yields new mathematical framework to understand cells [671d]
- 'Jumping genes' help fungus kill salamanders [671d]
- The transition to environmental sustainability is underway, but it won't be easy [671d]
- High efficiency vortex beam generation without alignment center [671d]
- Monometallic endohedral azafullerene synthesized for first time [671d]
- Improving safety assessment of nanoparticles [671d]
- Research shows how historic landscapes shape biodiversity and its protection [671d]
- Lettuce takes up toxic additives from tire wear [671d]
- Perseverant bacteria challenge antibacterial treatment [671d]
- New method to introduce efficient water splitting for hydrogen production at low voltage [671d]
- Methane emissions offset carbon uptake in Baltic macroalgae habitats [671d]
- A new way to spot methane leaks globally [671d]
- Your style of social media use may be connected to your well-being [671d]
- Putting the bones of giant, extinct 'thunderbirds' under the microscope reveals how they grew [671d]
- How tracking technology is transforming our understanding of animal behavior [671d]
- Researchers inspect gamma-ray flares of the blazar 3C 279 [671d]
- Study investigates the evolution of X-ray binary system GX 301-2 [671d]
- Disabled young people have less upward social mobility than their peers —and class background makes this worse [671d]
- Americans are taking more control over their work lives—because they have to [671d]
- Are black holes time machines? Yes, but there's a catch [671d]
- Micro-aggressions are repeated acts that send women backwards. How micro-accommodations can fight back [671d]
- New approach enables regiodivergent and enantioselective hydroxylation of C-H bonds [671d]
- New insights into a fundamental process in mitochondria [671d]
- Bioenergetics of rapid pollen tube growth [671d]
- Serpent in the sky captured with ESO telescope [671d]
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