The Brutalist Report - science
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- Australia's fearsome 'dinosaur bird' stares down extinction [223d]
- Torrent of volcanic mudflow hits Philippine village [223d]
- 'Open gates' in warming Arctic are expanding salmon range [223d]
- 'Painting with light' illuminates photo evidence of air pollution [223d]
- Blood sausages and yak milk: Bronze Age cuisine of Mongolian nomads unveiled [223d]
- Most collapsed stars fully rotate in seconds: This one takes nearly an hour [223d]
- 'Life goes on'—Panama islanders relocated as sea level rises [223d]
- Take three for Boeing Starliner crewed launch attempt [223d]
- Europe's long-delayed Ariane 6 rocket set for July 9 launch [223d]
- Early fires an ominous Greek summer warning: experts [223d]
- Hubble trouble: Veteran space telescope forced to take it easy [223d]
- New study finds Earth warming at record rate, but no evidence of climate change accelerating [223d]
- Diversity in farm landscapes helps wildlife, global study finds [223d]
- Tiny tropical puddle frogs show that protecting genetic variation is essential for animals to survive the climate crisis [223d]
- Rate of global warming caused by humans is at an all-time high, say scientists [223d]
- Cool paint made sustainable using recycled plastics [223d]
- Gravitational waves and the geometry of spacetime [223d]
- Giant viruses discovered on Greenland ice sheet could reduce ice melt [223d]
- Economic integration is a major leveler for Quebecers' immigration preferences, study shows [223d]
- Researchers say addressing ecological challenges in higher music education requires a radical change in mindsets [223d]
- Laser-based 3D printing: A powerful tool to advance optical microscopy [223d]
- New study confirms presence of benzene in natural gas and potential for undetectable indoor leaks [223d]
- Chasing down a cellular 'short circuit' sheds light on how certain diseases begin [223d]
- Researchers identify tomato exocarp-specific promoter for genetic enhancements [223d]
- Mission complete for ESA's OPS-SAT flying laboratory [223d]
- Carbon capture must quadruple by 2050 to meet climate targets: Report [223d]
- Boeing's Starliner set up for third shot at first human spaceflight [223d]
- Widely used climate theory doesn't 'ring' true, according to new tree data [223d]
- Danger warnings as heat wave hits western US [223d]
- Satellite SAR and its role in heritage site protection in Europe and China [223d]
- Loan liability: Negative associations with an auditor can affect loan chances [223d]
- First metal 3D printing on International Space Station [223d]
- Researchers develop rechargeable carbonaceous geosupercapacitor for sustainable pollutant abatement [223d]
- Study reviews current state of global navigation satellite system reflectometry [223d]
- Q&A: Researcher investigates how LGBTQ people are treated by law enforcement [223d]
- With Solar Cycle 25 still peaking, what sights, threats experts expect [223d]
- Decision-making analysis for a new variant of the classical secretary problem [223d]
- Tolerance towards Muslims—how can conflicts in everyday life be defused? [223d]
- Space race heats up: Advanced electronics cooling systems for spacecraft [223d]
- Police have become further removed from people in the Netherlands, study asserts [223d]
- Sustainable plastics are not a solution, researchers warn [223d]
- Remarkable new plant species steals nutrients from underground fungi [223d]
- Hiring pressures to diversify are influencing patterns of discrimination in unexpected ways [223d]
- Suppressing starlight: How to find other Earths [223d]
- What impact does ozone have on an exoplanet? [223d]
- Microinclusions improve women's workplace belonging and commitment [223d]
- Maine company plans to launch small satellites starting in 2025 [223d]
- Who gets to decide what counts as 'disorder'? [223d]
- Investors underestimated risk, impact of hurricanes prior to feeling 'Superstorm' Sandy's fury on Wall Street [223d]
- Researchers use tin to toughen bioimplant titanium alloys through the cocktail effect [223d]
- Mushroom stump waste could be inexpensive, healthy chicken feed supplement [223d]
- Training in formal classes proves the most effective way to prepare engineers to protect public welfare at work: Study [223d]
- Australia's subtropical peat bogs need fire to survive [223d]
- Young people in the UK say they are less likely to vote if their parents report depressive symptoms [223d]
- Teens treated unfairly by teachers more likely to have populist attitudes [223d]
- Study reveals first emissions snapshot of Australian coal mines [223d]
- New vegetation mapping tools aids flexible rangeland management [223d]
- Others' words, not firsthand experience, shape scientific and religious belief formation, study finds [223d]
- Earliest cattle herds in northern Europe found in the Netherlands [223d]
- You can now be frozen after death in Australia. If you're revived in the future, will you legally be the same person? [223d]
- Report reveals billion-dollar toll of domestic violence in California [223d]
- Studying violence toward women and animals can help us develop strategies to prevent both [223d]
- Sunshine spurs spending: Investors bet big on sunny days, study finds [223d]
- Real-time flood risk visualization via server-based mixed reality enhances accessibility and public safety [223d]
- Q&A: Nearly 25% of land in Africa has been damaged—what's to blame, and what can be done [223d]
- The fascinating psychology behind 'dine and dash' and why it's about so much more than a free meal [223d]
- Buying and selling forest carbon as a commodity could be dangerous if it trumps other environmental and social uses [223d]
- Returning a 170-year-old preserved lizard to Jamaica is a step toward redressing colonial harms, say researchers [223d]
- Online shoppers behave differently after chatting with staff of the opposite gender, research shows [223d]
- Is seeing believing? Not really, so animal welfare campaigns should take a different approach [223d]
- Rocky shores of Pacific Northwest show low resilience to changes in climate [223d]
- Exploring three frontiers in marine biomass and blue carbon capture [223d]
- Researchers discover disordered clock protein that sheds new light on circadian rhythms [223d]
- How climate social scientists are finding their way in the era of climate crisis [223d]
- Observing ultrafast photoinduced dynamics in a halogen-bonded supramolecular system [223d]
- Australia's 'learning by doing' approach to managing large mines is failing the environment [224d]
- Study shows climate change boosts olive tree-devouring bacteria in the Mediterranean [224d]
- Stormwater hits D.C.'s poorest neighborhoods hardest, study finds [224d]
- Net zero is not just good science—it's also a good deal for ordinary people [224d]
- How can we make good decisions by observing others? A videogame and computational model have the answer [224d]
- New method for safe and efficient cell transfection developed by researchers [224d]
- Why the future of democracy could depend on your group chats [224d]
- Do we have more empathy for people who are similar to us? New research suggests it's not that simple [224d]
- Scientists push single-molecule DNA sequencing to the next level [224d]
- Towards next-gen functional materials: Nanotube crystal enables direct observation of electron transfer in solids [224d]
- Gigantic Jurassic pterosaur fossil unearthed in Oxfordshire, UK [224d]
- Climate change projected to warm shallow groundwater by up to 3.5°C by 2099 [224d]
- Enormous rock engravings may be prehistoric territorial markers, suggest archaeologists [224d]
- Will the climate transition be a battle of materials? [224d]
- NASA's Hubble Space Telescope temporarily pauses observations after malfunction [224d]
- Physicists decode mechanics of knitted materials for engineering applications [224d]
- Molecular stop signal identified: The surveillance system of cell division [224d]
- Researchers develop instrument to measure lava viscosity in the field [224d]
- New analysis sheds light on Idaho's state dinosaur [224d]
- Study finds racial bias in traffic stops by Chicago police [224d]
- Swarm satellites help aurora chasers discover Steve's long-lost twin [224d]
- Studies find frequent mowing puts poisonous weed into survival mode, creating 'superweed' [224d]
- How symbiotic bacteria adapt to big environmental changes [224d]
- Giant skull of Australian megafauna bird reveals a prehistoric 'giga-goose' [224d]
- Study shows selective breeding has constrained communication abilities in domestic dogs compared to wolves [224d]
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