The Brutalist Report - science
- Britain began industrializing in the 17th century—more than 100 years earlier than history books claim [381d]
- Researchers envision sci-fi worlds involving changes to atmospheric water cycle [381d]
- Total solar eclipse forecast: Will your city have clear skies Monday? [381d]
- Students as teachers: The key to learning a language in virtual conversation exchanges [381d]
- Team develops portable swept-source Raman spectrometer for chemical and biomedical applications [381d]
- Factors impacting yield and size of day-neutral strawberries [381d]
- Scientists use AI to evaluate dental anthropology [381d]
- What's the earliest the moon could have formed? [381d]
- New fossil dolphin identified [381d]
- NASA to launch three sounding rockets during solar eclipse [381d]
- Pacific rock samples offer glimpse of active Earth 2.5 billion years ago [381d]
- Africa's carbon sink capacity is shrinking [381d]
- Q&A: The impact of China's rapidly aging society [381d]
- A robot hopper to explore the moon's dangerous terrain [381d]
- Mapping lava tubes on the moon and Mars from space [381d]
- 'Nudging' consumers is a common marketing tactic, but study finds it carries risk [381d]
- Q&A: How do animals react to a solar eclipse? [381d]
- ESA's solar eclipse maker, Proba-3 [381d]
- Phosphorus fertilization boosts young almond tree growth [381d]
- Nudging in a virtual supermarket for more animal welfare [381d]
- Computational chemistry needs to be sustainable too, say researchers [381d]
- What four decades of canned salmon reveal about marine food webs [381d]
- Study reports that people and environment both benefit from diversified farming, while bottom lines also thrive [381d]
- Mercury contamination rampant in Brazil Indigenous group: Study [381d]
- New research traces the fates of stars living near the Milky Way's central black hole [381d]
- How NASA's Roman Telescope will measure the ages of stars [381d]
- Rusty-patched bumblebee's struggle for survival found in its genes [381d]
- Textiles and food packaging biggest source of PFAS in Yangtze River [381d]
- How Taiwan managed to keep its death toll so low during the 7.4-magnitude earthquake [381d]
- Click chemistry: Research team creates 150 new compounds [381d]
- The life aquatic: Why diurnal frog species kept genes adapted to night vision [381d]
- Awe and dread: How religions have responded to total solar eclipses over the centuries [381d]
- ESA to launch Arctic weather satellite in June [381d]
- The omnipresence of PFAS—and what we can do about them [381d]
- Space scientists' new sensors shine spotlight on sun-Earth studies [381d]
- Amphibians use scream inaudible to humans for self-defense against predators, study suggests [381d]
- Academic freedom declining globally, index finds [381d]
- Electric cars credited with lower carbon dioxide emissions in US neighborhoods [381d]
- New research shows key molecules within nerve cells persist throughout life [381d]
- Climate engineering carries serious national security risks—countries facing extreme heat may try it anyway [381d]
- Only 57 producers are responsible for 80% of all fossil fuel and cement CO₂ emissions since 2016: Report [381d]
- More than 80% of the EU's farming subsidies support emissions-intensive animal products [381d]
- The Anthropocene epoch that isn't—what the decision not to label a new geological epoch means for Earth's future [381d]
- Why there may be oceans inside dwarf planets beyond Pluto—and what this means for the likely abundance of life [381d]
- Children born of rape: The devastating legacy of sexual violence in post-genocide Rwanda [381d]
- Viewpoint: Kenya's wildlife conservancies make old men rich, while making women and young people poorer [381d]
- New study flags alarmingly high levels of microplastics in Nigeria's Osun River [381d]
- Is the universe really a 'dark forest' full of hostile aliens in hiding? [381d]
- Cocoa price has doubled in mere months, but it shouldn't add much to the price of chocolate [381d]
- Climate change impacts terrorist activity, study finds [381d]
- Electric vehicles may be lowering Bay Area's carbon footprint: Monitors record small decrease in CO₂ emissions [381d]
- A natural history of the Red Sea and the uncertain future of its corals [381d]
- Research shows direct link between state income taxes and migration [381d]
- Asian-American social workers witness rise in anti-Asian racism [381d]
- Be humble to succeed in the workplace, says study [381d]
- Scientists pursue the total solar eclipse with NASA jet planes [381d]
- Unlocking Arctic mysteries: How melting ice shapes our climate [381d]
- New focused approach can help untangle messy quantum scrambling problems [381d]
- Researchers investigate possibility of collecting DNA from air-conditioning units at crime scenes [381d]
- Understanding how fire shapes plants can help protect them [381d]
- Researchers find the link between human activity and shifting weather patterns in western North America [381d]
- Eight ways to ensure Indonesia's nickel sector is sustainable [381d]
- How agroecology can be part of a 'just transition' for Canada's food system [381d]
- Out of alignment: How clashing policies make for terrible environmental outcomes [381d]
- If you have money anxiety, knowing your financial attachment style can help [381d]
- How plants heal wounds: Mechanical forces guide direction of cell division [381d]
- Salmon populations are struggling, bringing economic woes for California's fishing fleet [381d]
- Attack and defense in the microverse: How small RNA molecules regulate viral infections of bacteria [381d]
- Chinese scientists reveal the spinning mechanism of the silkworm [381d]
- New study paves the way for precision drugs to treat blood cancers [381d]
- Ancient ocean oxygenation timeline revealed [381d]
- Hummingbirds are 'on the go' in California: What you'll see and how to attract them [381d]
- Physics of complex fluids: Ring polymers show unexpected motion patterns under shear [381d]
- Operando spectroscopy provides a window on water oxidation [381d]
- Boeing 1 month out from 4 years of catchup to SpaceX with 1st crewed Starliner flight [381d]
- 'It's ultimately about predicting everything'—theory could be a map in the hunt for quantum materials [381d]
- Which type of clouds make it harder to see the April 8 solar eclipse? [381d]
- New method reveals secrets of protein interactions with potential for drug discovery [381d]
- Biodegradable aerogel: Airy cellulose from a 3D printer [381d]
- Team presents new path to long-term data storage based on atomic-scale defects [381d]
- Self-assembly of complex systems: Hexagonal building blocks are better [381d]
- Surface emitting semiconductor laser achieves efficiency breakthrough [381d]
- Turning microalgae into light-controlled, soft bio-microrobots [381d]
- Researchers use the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument to make the largest 3D map of our universe [381d]
- Scientists propose AI framework for mass-manufacturing of stem cells for regenerative medicine [381d]
- Shrinking birds change their tune: Birdsong may sound different in a warmer future [381d]
- Study shows impacts of invasive species transcend ecosystem boundaries [381d]
- Early herding communities used a wide variety of livestock management strategies, study finds [381d]
- Lab experiments show material flowing through cracks can isolate molecules that may reveal early life on Earth [381d]
- With the planet facing a 'polycrisis,' biodiversity researchers uncover major knowledge gaps [381d]
- A new method for storing and processing hydrogen chloride [381d]
- Study finds shy sea anemones are more likely to survive heat waves [381d]
- Tracing the largest solar storm in modern times from tree rings in Lapland [381d]
- Researchers reveal assembly of critical molecular machine that removes non-coding information from genes [381d]
- Pristine Finnish peatland offers glimpse into pre-industrial atmosphere [381d]
- Researchers create stable superconductor enhanced by magnetism [381d]
- Observations reveal complex morphology of Big Three Dragons [381d]
- Improving infectious disease testing with gold nanoparticles [381d]
- 'Force-sensing' protein could better treat diseases that cause seizures [381d]
- Unlocking exotic physics: Exploring graphene's topological bands in super-moiré structures [381d]
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