The Brutalist Report - science
- The pandemic has shown Southern Africa can do staycations—could this momentum hold in the long run? [669d]
- Insects and spiders make up more than half NZ's animal biodiversity—time to celebrate these spineless creatures [669d]
- Foams used in car seats and mattresses are hard to recycle—a new plant-based version avoids polyurethane's health risks [669d]
- Climate change is leaving African elephants desperate for water [669d]
- Shopping mall microbiome mirrors its shoppers [669d]
- High-efficiency gene-editing tool used on fungi significantly improves pace of new drug discovery [669d]
- A win-win for cell communities: Cells that cooperate live longer [669d]
- Human and Neanderthal brains have a surprising 'youthful' quality in common, new research finds [669d]
- Astronomers use 'little hurricanes' to weigh and date planets around young stars [669d]
- Fathoming the hidden heatwaves that threaten coral reefs [669d]
- New dwarf boa found in Ecuadoran Amazon [669d]
- New Indonesia capital imperils ancient Eden with 'ecological disaster' [669d]
- Study details impact of prairie dog plague die-off on other species [669d]
- Ancient humans had same sense of smell, but different sensitivities [669d]
- Scientists discover a new way of sharing genetic information in a common ocean microbe [669d]
- DNA repair scheme gets closer look for cancer therapy [669d]
- New photochemistry method eases manufacture of drug, chemical precursors [669d]
- Remains of ancient, indigenous dogs found at Jamestown, as well as proof people ate them [669d]
- New parents benefit from participating in family education program, study shows [669d]
- Researchers shed light on how exercise preserves physical fitness during aging [669d]
- Electrochemistry converts carbon to useful molecules [669d]
- Telling left from right: Cilia as cellular force sensors during embryogenesis [669d]
- New York City's greenery absorbs a surprising amount of its carbon emissions [669d]
- Team projects two out of three glaciers could be lost by 2100 [669d]
- New mass spectrometer for NASA's Europa Clipper mission [669d]
- Research could simplify process for calculating soil carbon credits [669d]
- Spring sunny heat waves caused record snow melt in 2021, adding to severe water supply impacts across the Western US [669d]
- Active terahertz beam steering based on mechanical deformation of a liquid crystal elastomer metasurface [669d]
- Wafer-scale 2D MoTe₂ layers enable highly-sensitive broadband integrated infrared detectors [669d]
- Advanced liquid crystal-based switchable optical devices for light protection applications [669d]
- Newly developed macromolecular model of phytoplankton could have implications for climate research [669d]
- Lost in translation: How 'risky' amino acids abort elongation in protein synthesis [669d]
- Metal halide perovskites for next-generation optoelectronics: Progress and prospects [670d]
- The effect of investing in foreign countries to pay lower taxes on economic productivity [670d]
- Review of photonics based on Weyl semimetals [670d]
- Charismatic CEOs lead to higher IPO prices [670d]
- Coal-like material transformed to amorphous graphite and nanotubes in simulations [670d]
- Formation of pores in mitochondrial membrane elucidated [670d]
- Natural product discoveries power drug discovery research [670d]
- Researchers realize the quantum simulations of topological phase transitions [670d]
- A legume locus stimulates promiscuous interaction with soil bacteria [670d]
- James Webb telescope reveals Milky Way–like galaxies in young universe [670d]
- Researchers develop efficient sodium-ion battery anode for energy storage [670d]
- New metric of molecular evolution in the search for the genetic basis of phenotypic traits [670d]
- Using intercropping systems for sustainable global agricultural production [670d]
- Caribbean breadfruit traced back to Capt. Bligh's 1791-93 journey [670d]
- New quantum computing architecture could be used to connect large-scale devices [670d]
- 2,000 years of genetic history in Scandinavia elucidates Viking age to modern day [670d]
- Weiss-Kruszka syndrome and the failure to establish neuronal identity [670d]
- Invasive rats transform reef fish behavior [670d]
- Elephants are creatures of habit when it comes to finding food [670d]
- Researchers develop new biodegradable plastic with thermoplastic properties similar to polyethylene [670d]
- New geostationary satellite enters service [670d]
- Newly discovered form of carbon is graphene's 'superatomic' cousin [670d]
- Superconductivity and ferroelectricity found in the same 2D material [670d]
- Cave markings show that Ice Age hunter-gatherers were the first to use a lunar calendar [670d]
- 'Whisper networks' thrive when women lose faith in formal systems of reporting sexual harassment [670d]
- Toxoplasma: the parasite that takes over our brains [670d]
- How the philosophy of the past can help us imagine the economy of the future [670d]
- How to feed your garden birds if you want to attract and support native species [670d]
- Germany to draw up legislation to enable carbon storage [670d]
- Internships have positive results but do little to influence long-term diversity in USDA Forest Service [670d]
- Farmland bird populations rise with nature-friendly farming [670d]
- Urban light pollution is a danger for marine ecosystems [670d]
- 'Boys will be boys': why consumers don't punish big polluters for greenwashing lies [670d]
- PFAS: you can't smell, see or taste these chemicals, but they are everywhere—and they're highly toxic to humans [670d]
- Antarctic tourism: Should we worry about damage to the ice and ecosystems? [670d]
- Observers explore the eclipsing polar BS Tri [670d]
- Politicians are getting older—shutting young people out of decision-making around the world [670d]
- Why technology alone can't solve the digital divide [670d]
- Oregon faces sustained and novel risks and opportunities as climate changes, new assessment shows [670d]
- Study sheds light on how PFAS 'forever chemicals' travel in groundwater [670d]
- Non-destructive neutron tomography reveals bone fragments inside a Medieval pendant [670d]
- Deep learning tool's 'computational microscope' predicts protein interactions, potential paths to new antibiotics [670d]
- Unraveling the neutrino's mysteries at the Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment [670d]
- Microplastics flow into Gulf St. Vincent waters [670d]
- Study suggests Mayas utilized market-based economics [670d]
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