The Brutalist Report - science
- No new articles in the last 24 hours.
- 1st lunar eclipse of 2023 dims full moon ever so slightly [647d]
- Researchers call for single approach on wild horses [647d]
- Providing legal counsel at initial bail hearings lowers incarceration rates, shows study [647d]
- A new model for the evolution of honey bee brains [647d]
- Fruit fly gut research leads to discovery of new phosphate-storing organelle [647d]
- Scientists capture elusive chemical reaction using enhanced X-ray method [647d]
- Herbaceous planting for ecological restoration of urban land based on mechanisms of the assembly of plant communities [647d]
- Will Yellowstone's geology produce rock music? [647d]
- Sand and dust storm research finds answers with AI and ancient knowledge [647d]
- South Korea badger farming linked to illegal wildlife trade and disease concerns [647d]
- Scientist uncovers roots of antibiotic resistance [647d]
- Study finds female astronauts more efficient, suggesting future space missions with all-female crews [647d]
- Archaea in a warming climate become less diverse, more predictable [647d]
- When the Fed announces a new monetary policy strategy, do households listen? [647d]
- Best path to fair living wage for global supply chain workers may take an indirect route, new research suggests [647d]
- Researchers demand European Parliament take action to fight pollution in the Mediterranean Sea [647d]
- Uncovering the mysteries of alfalfa seed dormancy through multispectral imaging analysis [647d]
- Study reveals intense CO2 degassing process in magmas [647d]
- A highly performing device for polariton-based coherent microwave emission and amplification [647d]
- Old-growth forests continue to disappear despite EU protection commitments [647d]
- Alexandrite laser crystals found to be well suited for space applications [647d]
- A new nondestructive method for assessing bioengineered artificial tissues [647d]
- Why good weather isn't a good thing for stock markets [647d]
- Report: Warming climate could deliver new crops, and blights, to New Zealand [647d]
- Gas observed moving into a massive galaxy offers evidence of material recycling [647d]
- Record low Antarctic sea ice is another alarming sign the ocean's role as climate regulator is changing, says researcher [647d]
- Humanity's tipping point? How the Queen's death stole a climate warning's thunder [647d]
- Why three-day weekends are great for well-being—and the economy [647d]
- Basic income could help create a more just and sustainable food system in Canada [647d]
- How to make your next holiday better for the environment [647d]
- April heat in western Med 'almost impossible without climate change' [647d]
- Opinion: Landslides are a global injustice, and they're rarely caused by the people worst affected [647d]
- Viewpoint: We won't solve the teacher shortage until we answer these four questions [647d]
- Study shows giraffes can use statistical reasoning [647d]
- More evidence found showing the moon's inner core is solid, like Earth's [647d]
- The exciting possibilities of tiny, twisted superconductors [647d]
- One of the world's best radon detectors just got smaller [647d]
- Underwater phenomenon bringing relief to hot corals [647d]
- Study of air quality impact of EVs shows inequalities due to income differences [647d]
- Earth from space: Farming the desert [647d]
- Opinion: AI used in justice system should keep 'humans in the loop' [647d]
- Study reveals presence of Hunga Tonga eruption aerosols in Northern Hemisphere stratospheric westerlies [647d]
- New technique enables in-vivo analysis of protein complexes [647d]
- Scale separation: Breaking down unsolvable problems into solvable ones [647d]
- Similar but different: Antarctic and Arctic sea ice and their responses to climate change [647d]
- Can fish catch colds? [647d]
- Port of Miami corals remarkably persistent, new study finds [647d]
- Researchers develop interfacial charge modification strategy to enhance photocatalytic water oxidation [647d]
- New imaging approach visualizes how applying force to proteins alters complex formations [647d]
- Indigenous youths use tech as 'weapon' to protect Amazon [647d]
- Archaeologists map important archaeological landscape where first Australians lived more than 60,000 years ago [647d]
- Secret behind Amazonian 'dark earth' could help speed up forest restoration across the globe [647d]
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