The Brutalist Report - science
- AI fact checks can increase belief in false headlines, study finds [439d]
- AI helps researchers dig through old maps to find lost oil and gas wells [439d]
- Closing the green space gap: Addressing gender inequality in nature access [439d]
- World War One dazzle camouflage was not as well understood as it might have been, researchers suggest [439d]
- Biologist explores why humans have sex—and sexes—in a world where life requires neither [439d]
- Social science research on trans and gender diverse youth highlights importance of inclusive policies [439d]
- The dual role of insects in parasitic plant reproduction solves a long-standing botanical mystery [439d]
- Q&A: Researcher discusses protecting the health of wildlife ecosystems [439d]
- How ecotourism can help promote cultural diversity and biodiversity [439d]
- Q&A: Financial tips to save money, stay happy during the holiday season [439d]
- Scientists exploit photo-induced chirality in thin films to improve authentication tech [439d]
- Unique microbial communities discovered beneath frozen surface of Antarctica's Lake Enigma [439d]
- Getting a grip on quark mixing: Physicists introduce framework to determine amount of mixing between up and down quarks [439d]
- Dynamic tracking technique can reduce noise in gravitational-wave detectors to peer deeper into the cosmos [439d]
- Novel covalent organic framework can remove a dangerous 'forever chemical' from drinking water [439d]
- A path towards applying topology in quantum computing [439d]
- The Amazon rainforest as a cloud machine: How thunderstorms and plant transpiration produce condensation nuclei [439d]
- Engineered enzymes may help plants adapt to higher temperatures [439d]
- CEO gender influences corporate social responsibility priorities, research suggests [439d]
- After decades of plantation agriculture, coconut palms dominate over half of Pacific atoll forests [439d]
- Turning corn colorful: Researchers demonstrate purple corn's surprising health benefits [439d]
- Limestone quarries could be vital for wild bee conservation [439d]
- Research introduces 'ecology stereotypes,' how perceptions are influenced by others' backgrounds [439d]
- Scientists streamline creation of nucleoside analogs, a group of life-saving molecules [439d]
- Archaeological remains in Alaska show humans and dogs bonded 12,000 years ago [439d]
- A third of people from Chicago carry concealed handguns in public before they reach middle age, 25-year study finds [439d]
- Isotope analysis reveals mammoth as key food source for ancient Americans [439d]
- Male African elephants develop distinct personality traits as they age [439d]
- Teaching evolution with conflict reduction practices increases acceptance, study finds [439d]
- Delhi's annual air pollution has become a human-made calamity [439d]
- Recycling sewage is a sensible way to improve water security, but would you swallow it? [439d]
- Deep seabed mining: Bad for biodiversity and terrible for the economy [439d]
- Why your personality might be affecting your salary, and how it shapes the gender pay gap [439d]
- New synthetic receptor expands cellular control options, including immune response and neurological signaling [439d]
- Warming oceans are changing marine habitats. A new study explores the impact on thousands of species [439d]
- Trump names billionaire private astronaut as next NASA chief [439d]
- Stick to current climate change laws, US tells top UN court [439d]
- A key transcription factor unlocks new potential in stem cell-based embryo models [439d]
- Supreme Court could narrow the scope of federal environmental reviews [439d]
- Purple crabs clobber blue carbon: Study shows how they disrupt carbon cycling in salt marshes along US East Coast [439d]
- New pathway found for regulating zinc in E. coli [439d]
- AI Jesus might 'listen' to your confession, but it can't absolve your sins. A scholar of Catholicism explains [439d]
- Why you shouldn't lie to your children about Father Christmas, according to philosophers [439d]
- Webb finds new galaxies in Spiderweb protocluster field [439d]
- ZnO-based nanoplatforms show potential for early cancer screening [439d]
- Investigating seasonal effects on health-promoting compounds in cabbage varieties [439d]
- Q&A: How China tariffs could backfire on US—scholar says higher prices, supply-chain disruptions for Americans [439d]
- Liquid water molecules are inherently asymmetric: New insight into the bonds between water molecules [439d]
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