The Brutalist Report - science
- July likely to be warmest month on record: NASA scientist [560d]
- All concrete, no trees: Athens ill-prepared for heatwaves [560d]
- California Science Center starts complex process to display Space Shuttle Endeavour vertically [560d]
- See how an Alaska paddleboarder escaped a close encounter with a humpback whale [560d]
- Tourists help scientists reveal microplastic pollution on remote Arctic beaches [560d]
- Impacts of climate change on animals will be multi-faceted, reveals study [560d]
- Experts alarmed as free Barbies given to UK primary schools to teach social skills [560d]
- Fueled by new chemistry, algorithm mines fungi for useful molecules [560d]
- New research examines contamination in gulf coast waters [560d]
- Draining 401(k) accounts when changing jobs: The hidden time bomb undermining retirement savings [560d]
- Improved stability could help perovskite solar cells compete with silicon [560d]
- NASA's ComPair gamma-ray hunting mission prepares for balloon flight [560d]
- Spill of 1,200 barrels of crude blight Ecuadoran beach [560d]
- Researchers make progress toward a new environmentally friendly nanomaterial that could revolutionize electronic devices [560d]
- Cross-selling can help retailers avoid lost revenue from returns [560d]
- Building a high-performance electrochemical sensor using activated biochar from pineapple peel waste [560d]
- Climate science is catching up to climate change with predictions that could improve proactive response [560d]
- Brighter fluorescent markers allow for finer imaging [560d]
- Examining how cells talk to each other [560d]
- Researchers find ancient, high-energy impacts could have fueled Venus volcanism [560d]
- Research shows some people believe scientists threaten their group's power, values [560d]
- Examining how the world's largest water striders jump on water [560d]
- Scientists discover filter-feeding basking sharks are warm-bodied like great whites [560d]
- How eelgrass spread around the world [560d]
- Wide field-of-view metasurface-enhanced scanning lidar may hold promise for autonomous vehicle technology [560d]
- Exploring the multi-billion-dollar risk to economic activity from climate extremes affecting ports [560d]
- A roundup of the extreme heat hitting the globe [560d]
- Greenland melted recently, says study that raises future sea level threat [560d]
- Desert microbes turn on drought tolerance when needed, finds study [560d]
- Q&A: COVID-19 likely came from animals—why aren't we working to prevent a new scourge? [560d]
- Hitting reset to start a new embryo [560d]
- Coexistence in microbial communities: Study challenges popular predictive rule [560d]
- Demand for offsetting is low when carbon credit prices are high, finds New Zealand report [560d]
- Study demonstrates consistency of rotational evolution between open cluster and field stars for determining age [560d]
- Team develops highly active catalyst for alkaline water electrolysis using boron and sulfur [560d]
- Spiritual people more likely to be skeptical about science, study finds [560d]
- Advanced method to improve stability of spray dried microcapsules for delivery of nutrients [560d]
- How does Arctic sea ice change at different spatiotemporal scales? [560d]
- Climatic and non-climatic factors found to affect vegetation greenness in Sudano-Sahelian region of Africa [560d]
- Surveying public tolerance of lethal wildlife management in Japan [560d]
- Vehicle idling can compound local pollution on bad air days [560d]
- Researchers explore potential of marine-derived rennet for cheesemaking [560d]
- Bigger, wilder, more destructive: How cold fronts affected the Black Summer bushfires [560d]
- Discovery may lead to terahertz technology for quantum sensing [560d]
- Genes that shape bones identified, offering clues about our past and future [560d]
- Observing the long-postulated intermediate of catalytic amination reactions [560d]
- Immune systems develop 'silver bullet' defenses against common bacteria [560d]
- Greenland melted some 416,000 years ago, shows high risk of causing sea level rise today [560d]
- Nature inspires breakthrough achievement: Hazard-free production of fluorochemicals [560d]
- New study reveals reptiles' spontaneous association between vision and hearing [561d]
- Unexpectedly calm and remote galaxy cluster discovered [561d]
- Galaxy J1135 reveals its water map [561d]
- New method brings increased efficiency, precision and reliability in DNA editing [561d]
- Buzzing down the primrose path: Specialist bee species prefer abundant host plants [561d]
- Using chaotic inputs to improve microcomb-based parallel ranging [561d]
- Study suggests partisan politics could help public health [561d]
- Hubble sees boulders escaping from asteroid Dimorphos [561d]
- A new type of superresolution for exploring cell division [561d]
- Study shows bats struggle during organic farming transition [561d]
- Better synthesis of geospatial data may help combat poachers, scientists say [561d]
- Cities need plans for extreme heat, says expert, as heat waves stretch across the globe [561d]
- Good for soil, grim for the air: More than third of fertilizer use breaking UK Government emissions thresholds [561d]
- Why price does not indicate how long clothes will last [561d]
- New study expands the scope of aza-Friedel–Crafts reactions [561d]
- Chemists recycle shrimp waste as catalyst for hydrogen generation [561d]
- Team forecasts a surge in extreme El Niño events despite carbon dioxide reductions: A call to refine climate policy [561d]
- Gene variation makes apple trees 'weep,' improving orchards [561d]
- Presumed Beethoven skull fragments return to Vienna [561d]
- Crawford Lake: What the past can teach us about urban living today [561d]
- How classic psychology warped our view of human nature as cruel and selfish—but new research is more hopeful [561d]
- A new Achilles heel of the bacterial cell wall [561d]
- Is the end of the 'particle era' of physics upon us? [561d]
- New record set for highest elemental superconducting transition temperature [561d]
- Engineering plants for a changing climate [561d]
- New computer simulations follow the formation of galaxies and cosmic large-scale structure with precision [561d]
- Wild fruits with higher alcohol content found to be more widely dispersed by mammals [561d]
- Plastiglomerates: Study demonstrates artificial rocks from macroplastics threaten ocean health [561d]
- An even closer look at the 'doubly magic' tin-100 nucleus [561d]
- Fossil study shows coelacanths thrived in Switzerland after a mass extinction [561d]
- New discovery unveils the ancient marine origins of gar fish [561d]
- NASA's TROPICS offers multiple views of intensifying hurricanes [561d]
- Drawing in the sand at the beach? Our ancestors did the same 140,000 years ago [561d]
- NASA's IXPE fires up astronomers with new blazar findings [561d]
- Researchers design synthetic peptide to kill antibiotic-resistant bacteria [561d]
- New enzyme unlocks potential for health-promoting compounds in sorghum [561d]
- A hundred years of logging threatens the Innu link to their land [561d]
- Researchers reprogram gene therapy viral vectors to bind specific protein targets [561d]
- Post-menopause orca mothers appear to protect their male offspring from being injured by other orcas [561d]
- Catalyst can control methane emissions in natural gas engines [561d]
- First contact with aliens could end in colonization and genocide if we don't learn from history [561d]
- Reducing food waste: A smaller environmental win than expected? [561d]
- Paleontologists identify two new species of sabertooth cat [561d]
- Researchers generate human embryo-like structures that include extraembryonic tissue [561d]
- Neon tetra fish form queues to avoid bottlenecks [561d]
- Palm oil plantations and deforestation in Guatemala: Certifying products as 'sustainable' is no panacea [561d]
- Give more people with learning disabilities the chance to work, historian argues [561d]
- Crafting molecular puzzles: A strategic approach to developing robust porous molecular crystals [561d]
- Did that message come from Earth or space? Now SETI researchers can be sure [561d]
- Using a LEGO robot as a gradient mixer to purify DNA origami nanostructures [561d]
- Long and slow, or fast and furious: The clever way blue-green algae hedge their bets in blooms [561d]
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