The Brutalist Report - science
- Revealing the secrets of freshwater streams [355d]
- New study quantifies the power of bipartisan coalitions [355d]
- When the media believe that a firm is really green [355d]
- When countries cut taxes for new ideas, capital investments rise [355d]
- Study leads to milestone advances in understanding lethal bronzing of palm trees [355d]
- Short-lived solutions for tall trees in Chile's megadrought [355d]
- Countries tussle at 'rocky' global plastic talks [355d]
- Once hostile, NASA holds first public meeting on UFOs [355d]
- Firefighters in east Canada battle 'unprecedented' blazes [355d]
- Triple-whammy of cyclones, a 1-in-200-year event, drove Italy's deadly flooding, scientists say [355d]
- AI crop predictor aids Africa's crisis planning [355d]
- Social networks key to water management and sanitation in the Pacific, says study [355d]
- Improving precision of planning results in resilient forests [355d]
- Research is the first to unlock the secret of microbial slime [355d]
- Exploring how we've underestimated Earth's heat storage [355d]
- Migratory bats tracked for the first time ever using new algorithm [355d]
- Leveling up scanning electron microscope measurements for chip manufacturing [355d]
- Baseball reveals that specialists excel after leaving comfort zones [355d]
- One spacecraft could visit all of Saturn's inner large moons [355d]
- NASA researchers detect tsunamis by their rumble in the atmosphere [355d]
- Phenomenal phytoplankton: Scientists uncover cellular process behind oxygen production [355d]
- Understanding the tantalizing benefits of tantalum for improved quantum processors [355d]
- Researchers solve colorful Kuiper Belt puzzle [355d]
- Neanderthal and human fire-making methods suggest different origins, shared intelligence [355d]
- As water levels drop, the risk of arsenic rises [355d]
- 'Lab-on-a-chip' can tell the difference between COVID and the flu [355d]
- How much nitrogen does corn get from fertilizer? Less than farmers think [355d]
- The age of blood stains says more about the crime [355d]
- More pragmatic approach needed when sourcing seeds for ecological restoration in New Zealand [355d]
- How linked data, artificial intelligence could help animals [355d]
- Greenlandic glacial rock flour can help fight climate change, show two new studies [355d]
- New 3D stretchable electronics can advance organ-on-chip technology [355d]
- Brown recluse spider: Fact vs. fiction and tips for prevention [355d]
- Why do some people live to be a 100? Intestinal bacteria may hold the answer [355d]
- Children are more curious than apes, often choosing a 'mystery box' over a certain reward [355d]
- Ground beneath Thwaites Glacier mapped for first time [355d]
- Protecting large ocean areas doesn't curb fishing catches: Study [355d]
- X-ray analysis identifies mystery ancient marine reptile from Svalbard [355d]
- Study uncovers key details of fat cells, advancing potential treatments for obesity, diabetes [355d]
- Romantic relationships between coworkers may deteriorate workplace culture [355d]
- Study demonstrates one of the world's fastest electron microscopes in action [355d]
- Variable deficit irrigation in cotton can help improve yields, save water [355d]
- Level of support for gender-neutral option on state IDs found to be affected by political orientation, social context [355d]
- Plants found to leave chemical fingerprints on an ozone-depleting gas [355d]
- New research analyzes socioecological influences on carbon in agroecosystems [355d]
- Modeling study: Linking carbon markets with an allowance exchange rate yields environmental, economic dividends [355d]
- Study identifies pro-viral human protein critical for embryo development [355d]
- Crossing the ring: New method enables C-H activation across saturated carbocycles [355d]
- How a mysterious protein plays a crucial role in plant growth [355d]
- Fairy tales offer accessible ways to communicate energy research in the social sciences to help tackle climate change [355d]
- White, high-income people more likely to move farther from family, study finds [355d]
- Geneticists discover hidden 'whole genome duplication' that may explain why some species survived mass extinctions [355d]
- Study shows evictions happen most in predominantly Black neighborhoods, homes with children [355d]
- Scientists' report world's first X-ray of a single atom [355d]
- Study shows alligators are the engineers of the wetlands [355d]
- You can make carbon dioxide filters with a 3D printer [355d]
- Examining a nanocrystal that shines on and off indefinitely [355d]
- Overfishing linked to rapid evolution of codfish [355d]
- 1.5C of warming is too hot for a just world: study [355d]
- Examining morality and competition in science [355d]
- NASA talks UFOs with public ahead of final report on unidentified flying objects [355d]
- Baby boys more chatty than girls, according to large study [355d]
- Exploring how the climate is impacted by the seas in Indonesia [355d]
- Researchers highlight emerging climate change risk to seafood industry [355d]
- NIRISS instrument on Webb maps an ultra-hot Jupiter-like exoplanet's atmosphere [355d]
- Paleontologists discover elephant graveyard in North Florida [355d]
- Study: Where to place discounted products relative to regularly priced products to maximize sales [355d]
- Spinosaur Britain: Multiple species likely roamed Cretaceous Britain [355d]
- New catalyst design for electrocatalytic acetylene semihydrogenation [355d]
- New scheme for qubit control in a multilevel system [355d]
- Examining the latest developments of spatiotemporal vortices of light [355d]
- Systematic racism embedded in Aboriginal women's deaths, study concludes [355d]
- How much damage will lunar landings do to lunar orbiters? [355d]
- Plastic recycling is failing—here's how the world must respond [355d]
- Detailed structure of understudied cell division 'nanomachine' revealed [355d]
- Counterintuitive lithium compounds suggest route toward high-temperature superconductivity [355d]
- Reusable packaging revolution is close, experts say [355d]
- Increasing heat is already a factor in human migration—new study [355d]
- Assumptions about gender roles in past humans ignore an icky but potentially crucial part of original 'paleo diet' [355d]
- A sustainable Australia depends on what happens in our cities—that's why we need a national urban policy [355d]
- Team develops nanoparticles to deliver brain cancer treatment [355d]
- High-resolution roadmap charted for regeneration of pancreatic β cells [355d]
- Earth's energy budget is not in balance. Should we be concerned? [355d]
- New theoretical model claims to solve mystery of early massive galaxies [355d]
- How do sea level and monsoons influence the development of coral islands? [355d]
- The role of global DNA methylation in rat limb bud development in vitro [355d]
- Majority of consumers care what kind of data they share with retailers and service providers, new study finds [355d]
- From whiteboard work to random groups, these simple fixes could get students thinking more in maths lessons [355d]
- Automation risks creating a two-tier workforce of haves and have-nots [355d]
- Archaeologists identify Moluccan boats that may have visited Australia from Indonesia in rock art drawings [355d]
- A protein mines, sorts rare earths better than humans, paving way for green tech [355d]
- A just world on a safe planet: First study quantifying Earth system boundaries [355d]
- Photos from the field: Spying on Antarctic moss using drones, MossCam, smart sensors and AI [355d]
- Desert ants increase the visibility of their nest entrances in the absence of landmarks [355d]
- Technology is far from a silver bullet for solving homelessness or child welfare issues [355d]
- Why more cities are hiring 'night mayors' and establishing forms of nighttime governance [355d]
- What it takes to become a spelling bee champ [355d]
- Researchers reveal drug resistance mechanism of pathogen Staphylococcus aureus [355d]
- First experimental confirmation that some microbes are powered by electricity [355d]
- How the flu virus hacks our cells [355d]
Previous Day