The Brutalist Report - science
- Scientists develop new geochemical 'fingerprint' to trace contaminants in fertilizer [637d]
- Tracing the history of perturbative expansion in quantum field theory [637d]
- Study reveals how a sugar-sensing protein acts as a 'machine' to switch plant growth—and oil production—on and off [637d]
- Researchers develop world's smallest quantum light detector on a silicon chip [637d]
- How heat waves are affecting Arctic phytoplankton [637d]
- Horse remains show Pagan-Christian trade networks supplied horses from overseas for the last horse sacrifices in Europe [637d]
- Study examines low-permittivity dielectric ceramics for microwave/millimeter-wave communication [637d]
- New feather mite species discovered on the endangered Okinawa rail [637d]
- An SEC mystery: What's the deal with voluntary filers? [637d]
- Research: Technology is changing how companies do business [637d]
- Canada's wildfire season begins [637d]
- Earth from space: New Zealand's North Island [637d]
- How does the US know that forced labor is happening in China? A supply chain expert weighs in [637d]
- Feeding native ecosystems with waste [637d]
- Overlooked coastal marine ecosystems can capture more carbon dioxide than previously thought, finds study [637d]
- Ariane 6 launches Replicator for 3D printing in open space [637d]
- Researchers unlock water-saving potential of wheat with TabHLH27 balancing stress and growth [637d]
- Researchers confirm scale matters in determining vulnerability of freshwater fish to climate changes [637d]
- Victim-survivors of rape and sexual assault feel perpetrators' rights supersede their own at sentencing: Report [637d]
- Researchers discuss current state of homophobia, transphobia and biphobia [637d]
- Ion irradiation offers promise for 2D material probing [637d]
- Linking leaf elemental traits to biomass across forest biomes in the Himalayas [637d]
- Furry thieves are running loose in a Maine forest, research shows [637d]
- Research finds human activity over natural inputs determines the bacterial community in an ice core [637d]
- Study shows optical excitation of hot carriers enables ultrafast dynamic control of nanoscale plasmons [637d]
- Researchers suppress non-Hermitian effects via 'fake' magnetic fields [637d]
- Report: 'Urgent' change needed to tackle bullying in astronomy and geophysics [637d]
- To save their soil, Kansas tribe shifts to regenerative agriculture—and transforms their farms [637d]
- Bolstering environmental data science with equity-centered approaches [638d]
- How China's massive water transfer shapes drinking water quality [638d]
- Pickleball courts in a legal pickle over the associated noise [638d]
- Researchers believe the raptor caracara deserves a public relations makeover [638d]
- Exploration of polymer cononsolvency mechanism through soft X-ray absorption spectroscopy [638d]
- Study indicates Earth's earliest sea creatures drove evolution by stirring the water [638d]
- Chemists develop new method for introducing fluorinated components into molecules [638d]
- From fungi to fashion: Mushroom eco-leather is moving towards the mainstream [638d]
- Study identifies new topogenesis pathway for folding and assembly of multi-spanning membrane proteins [638d]
- Hubble views cosmic dust lanes [638d]
- Deep-sea sponge's 'zero-energy' flow control could inspire new energy efficient designs [638d]
- Microplastics may slow the rate at which carbon is pulled from the sea surface to the depths [638d]
- Study shows plants restrict use of corrective 'Tipp-Ex proteins' [638d]
- Researchers in Portugal develop an image analysis AI platform to boost worldwide research [638d]
- At Thailand dive expo, fears for coral's future [638d]
- Using DNA origami, researchers create diamond lattice for future semiconductors of visible light [638d]
- Controversial floating beach unveiled off French Riviera [638d]
- Study finds paleolithic people settled in Cyprus thousands of years earlier than previously thought [638d]
- Major declines reported in South Korean big cat trade [638d]
- Differing values of nature can still lead to joined up goals for sustainability [638d]
- With the help of catalysts the chemical industry can be revolutionizes and create a circular economy, say researchers [638d]
- Remains of two men from central China shed light on ancient practice of punitive amputation [638d]
- Modern plant enzyme partners with surprisingly ancient protein [638d]
- Astronomers detect rare neutral atomic-carbon absorbers with deep neural network [638d]
- Chemists develop new method for making gamma chiral centers on simple carboxylic acids [638d]
- A new 'rule of biology' may have come to light, expanding insight into evolution and aging [638d]
- 'Zombie cells' in the sea: Viruses keep the most common marine bacteria in check [638d]
- Researchers use machine-learning modeling tools to improve zinc-finger nuclease editing technology [638d]
- Pottery residue research explores culinary traditions in Germany from the Early Neolithic to the Bronze Age [638d]
- New research shows the true cost of reproduction across the animal kingdom [638d]
- Bacterial proteins shed light on antiviral immunity [638d]
- The observation of a Spin Berry curvature-enhanced orbital Zeeman effect in a kagome metal [638d]
- Spiny legged 308-million-year-old arachnid discovered in the Mazon Creek locality [638d]
- Data from MAXI J1820+070 shows Einstein was right about how matter plunges into a black hole [638d]
- Weather eases Canadian oil sands city wildfire menace [638d]
- For sale: unique piece of land in strategic Arctic archipelago [638d]
- A devastating fire 2,200 years ago preserved a moment of life and war in Iron Age Spain, down to a single gold earring [638d]
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