The Brutalist Report - science
- UK's poorest children likelier to have less understanding of personal finances, study finds [615d]
- Why we need to fall out of love with flaky white fish [615d]
- Shows like 'Succession' tap into our deepest desires for escapism, says researcher [615d]
- For sheds in wildfire zones, researchers determine how close is too close to home [615d]
- Researchers show mobile elements monkeying around the genome [615d]
- Couples' social networks took long-lasting hit during COVID [615d]
- Study identifies boat strikes as a growing cause of manatee deaths in Belize [615d]
- Climate change forces a rethinking of mammoth Everglades restoration plan [615d]
- Ozone layer recovery delayed, surface UV radiation continues to rise, finds study [615d]
- Industrially applied and relevant transformations of 1,3-butadiene using homogeneous catalysts [615d]
- Symbiotic and pathogenic fungi may use similar molecular tools to manipulate plants [615d]
- Machine learning-based protein annotation tool predicts protein function [615d]
- Think you're good at saying no? Actually, you could probably use a few pointers [615d]
- Shared modeling can help schools predict, avert dropouts [615d]
- Space tractor beams may not be the stuff of sci-fi for long [615d]
- Preexisting stereotypes found to influence entertainment selection [615d]
- Municipal administrators in Brazil know about NbS but rarely use them to reduce environmental inequality, study finds [615d]
- Smiles and jokes can help good managers boost hotel staff performance [615d]
- Ultrafast terahertz emission from emerging symmetry-broken materials [615d]
- Smallest agri-SMEs in Africa owner-managed by women bore the brunt of COVID-19, new study reveals [615d]
- Accelerating nanoscale X-ray imaging of integrated circuits with machine learning [615d]
- Using satellite date to help accelerate the green transition [615d]
- Emphasizing supports in permanent supportive housing key to ending homelessness, says report [615d]
- Thorium-229: How the first nuclear transition can be excited with lasers in the visible wavelength range [615d]
- Archaeologists discover 4,300-year-old copper ingots in Oman [615d]
- Cutting boards can produce microparticles when used to chop veggies, study shows [615d]
- Why our news consumption might be more worrisome than misinformation [615d]
- Poor UK households more vulnerable to climate shocks, says new research [615d]
- Calculating the effects of a climate transition in India [615d]
- Mining atlas helps map Australia's clean energy future [615d]
- Older people need a stronger media voice, say Australian study [615d]
- Robots in orbit are becoming even more popular, but there are still many technical challenges ahead [615d]
- The Primate Genome Project unlocks hidden secrets of primate evolution [615d]
- NASA's Mars helicopter went silent for six agonizing days [615d]
- How a fungus sidesteps a plant's defense mechanism [615d]
- The case of the missing Jupiters: Gas giant planets are a no-show around small red stars [615d]
- Using a gene-editing tool to improve productivity in rice crops [615d]
- X-rays visualize how one of nature's strongest bonds breaks [615d]
- Tiny quantum electronic vortexes can circulate in superconductors in ways not seen before [615d]
- Primates' DNA highlights applications for human health [615d]
- Study tracks how adaptations to living in cold climate promoted social evolution in Asian colobine primates [615d]
- Ancient viruses discovered in coral symbionts' DNA [615d]
- Teachers reluctant to use technology in music teaching, say experts [615d]
- Honey bee colony aggression linked to gene regulatory networks [615d]
- Firms withheld pesticide toxicity data from EU: study [615d]
- Q&A: Are liberals truly more depressed than conservatives? [615d]
- High-resolution images reveal workings of a bacterial RNA riboswitch, a promising new target for antibiotics [615d]
- Most super-rich couples have breadwinning husbands and stay-at-home wives, contrasting sharply with everyone else [615d]
- Integrating robotics into wildlife conservation: Enhancing predator deterrents through innovative movement strategies [615d]
- Study finds weedy seadragons genetically connected across the Great Southern Reef [615d]
- Northsiders are more connected to nature than southsiders, Melbourne study suggests [615d]
- Why allowing more migrants into the US could boost the economy [615d]
- 'An exciting possibility': Scientists discover markedly different kangaroos on either side of Australia's dingo fence [615d]
- Finding more effective ways to combat leishmaniasis by working with parasites [615d]
- Engineers report low-cost human biomarker sensor designs [615d]
- Report: Financial tools needed to pay $200 billion nature restoration in Southeast Asia [615d]
- Why 40°C is bearable in a desert but lethal in the tropics [615d]
- Repurposing Australian tobacco plants as 'biofactories' for medicines [615d]
- Study finds forest protection successfully leads to reduced emissions at global scale [615d]
- Government body warns of increased health threats from climate change in Germany [615d]
- Optical effect advances quantum computing with atomic qubits to a new dimension [615d]
- First soil map of terrestrial and blue carbon highlights need for conservation [615d]
- Recycling: what you can and can't recycle and why it's so confusing [615d]
- How food insecurity affects people's rights to choose whether or not to have children, and how they parent [615d]
- Quantifying mangroves' value as a climate solution and economic engine [615d]
- Researchers cultivate archaea that break down crude oil in novel ways [615d]
- The 'breath' between atoms—a new building block for quantum technology [615d]
- Researchers find a way to reduce the overheating of semiconductor devices [615d]
- Treatment creates steel alloys with superior strength and plasticity [615d]
- Using magnetic nanoparticles as a rapid test for sepsis [615d]
- A not-so-selfish 'genetic parasite' helps to preserve fertility [615d]
- Droughts increasingly reduce carbon dioxide uptake in the tropics, finds study [615d]
- Flat fullerene fragments attractive to electrons, shows study [615d]
- New theory may explain Earth's oxygen-rich atmosphere and the late evolution of animal life [615d]
- Astrophysicists confirm the faintest galaxy ever seen in the early universe [615d]
- Chemists develop a new class of antibiotics to fight resistant bacteria [615d]
- New study explains interaction between quantized vortices and normal fluids [615d]
- Japan reports warmest spring on record [615d]
- Supercomputer simulations provide a better picture of the sun's magnetic field [615d]
- New hot DOG in the sky: Astronomers discover a hot-dust-obscured galaxy [615d]
- Ticks prove resilient to extreme temperatures [615d]
- Study examines how DNA damage is repaired by antioxidant enzymes [615d]
- Petit-spot volcanoes involve deepest known submarine hydrothermal activity, may release methane [616d]
- WMO: tracking the world's weather and climate [616d]
- It is written: why France holds to analysing handwriting [616d]
- It's time to prepare for the 2023 Atlantic hurricane season [616d]
- 'How do we know what we don't know?': Scientists completely define the process of methylation [616d]
- Producing large, clean 2D materials made easy: Just 'KISS' [616d]
- Biodegradable plastic from sugar cane also threatens the environment, finds new research [616d]
- Warming climate could turn ocean plankton microbes into carbon emitters [616d]
- Secret industry documents reveal that makers of PFAS 'forever chemicals' covered up their health dangers [616d]
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