The Brutalist Report - science
- No new articles in the last 24 hours.
- North Korea's illegal wildlife trade threatens endangered species, study finds [184d]
- Amid a drastic decline in endangered primates, researchers call for conservation measures [184d]
- Virtual reality study reveals how burglars weigh risk and reward in response to environmental features [184d]
- A temporary international market exit may lead to future global expansion [184d]
- Scientists solve 500-million-year fossil mystery [184d]
- Fluorescence color-change strategy enables rapid detection of tertiary amines and opioids [184d]
- After 170 years, Thoreau's river observations inform our changing climate [184d]
- Basic research advances science, and can also have broader impacts on modern society [184d]
- Grooming brushes help feedlot cattle stay calmer and more sociable, study finds [184d]
- Flavor symmetry of the high-energy world does not work as expected [184d]
- How do therapy dogs help domestic abuse survivors receiving support services? [184d]
- NASA telescopes tune into a black hole prelude and fugue [184d]
- Selfish gene that skews sex ratio in fruit flies has unique self-limiting mechanism [184d]
- Some water conservation programs may get more value by targeting rural farms [184d]
- In vivo 3D printing using sound holds promise for precise drug delivery, wound healing and more [184d]
- Atmospheric mercury levels plummet as global efforts curb toxic emissions [184d]
- Iron-generated rust binds and removes selenium, offering safer water treatment options [184d]
- Slow-growing bacteria respond more sensitively to their environment [184d]
- People who understand the health dangers of living in high-risk areas are more likely to accept home buyouts [184d]
- Ultrasound unlocks a safer, greener way to make hydrogels [184d]
- Previously unknown accordion worm discovered off the coasts of Spain [184d]
- ALICE detects the conversion of lead into gold at the Large Hadron Collider [184d]
- Innovative new detector to hunt for neutrinos [184d]
- Global temperatures stuck at near-record highs in April: EU monitor [184d]
- EU parliament backs emissions reprieve for carmakers [184d]
- Elk could return to UK after 3,000 years as plan wins funding [184d]
- Simple oxygen tweaks could curb 'laughing gas' emissions from wastewater systems [184d]
- Secrets of the Thames: Mudlarking treasures showcase history of London's river and the people who scour its banks [184d]
- How proposed changes to higher education accreditation could impact campus diversity efforts [184d]
- Humans are killing helpful insects in hundreds of ways. Simple steps can reduce the harm [184d]
- Refrigeration systems in small fishing boats reduce food waste and provide better catch conditions [184d]
- Why loneliness should be treated as a social issue [184d]
- Nature visits can improve well-being disparities among urban dwellers [184d]
- Securing Europe means protecting the climate: New policy brief charts path for 1.5° lifestyles [184d]
- Sulfur runoff amplifies mercury concentrations in Florida Everglades [184d]
- Just 30 tree species dominate world's most diverse savanna [184d]
- Hubble pinpoints roaming massive black hole [184d]
- Cultural burning by Indigenous peoples increased oak in forests near settlements, study suggests [184d]
- High attendance linked to fewer gun-related expulsions [184d]
- One glass, full color: Sub-millimeter waveguide shrinks augmented-reality glasses [184d]
- Costly catch: Study reveals the alarming cost of tuna fishing devices on global ocean life [184d]
- African dig uncovers bone tools that offer insights on early human life [184d]
- Imaging technique tracks individual bacterial cells as they leave their biofilm community [184d]
- Explosive evolution: Study reveals rapid diversification of coral-reef fishes [184d]
- Webb visualization reveals 3D structure of Cosmic Cliffs [184d]
- Topological polycrystal: A new approach to configurable, multiband topological photonic circuitry [184d]
- Potent molecule targets chlamydia bacteria while sparing beneficial microbes [184d]
- Mammalian lifespan linked to brain size and immune system function [184d]
- Study reveals all of the biggest US cities are sinking: Groundwater pumping is the main cause in most [184d]
- Database reveals vital ocean links to aid conservation [184d]
- AI vision system reveals bird wings evolved for heat regulation, not just flight [184d]
- Satellites observe glacier committing 'ice piracy' [184d]
- AI-designed DNA controls genes in healthy mammalian cells for first time [184d]
- Eggs less likely to crack when dropped side-on, research reveals [184d]
- Even as emissions level off, carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is growing faster than ever. Here's why [184d]
- Children in need of 'rescuing': Challenging the myths at the heart of the global adoption industry [184d]
- 'Utu' as foreign policy: How a Māori worldview can make sense of a shifting world order [184d]
- Why people reject new rules—but only until they take effect [184d]
- Proba-3 achieves precise formation flying [184d]
- Protecting Iceland's towns from lava flows—with dirt [184d]
- Forest home of 'polar dinosaurs' 120 million years ago in southern Australia recreated in detail for the first time [184d]
- No matter who the next pope is, U.S. Catholics stand 'at a crossroads'—a sociologist explains [184d]
- Chinese research isn't taken as seriously as papers from elsewhere, researchers find [184d]
- Nearly half of sexual abuse first happens at age 15 or younger, global study finds [184d]
- SoCal officials unleash sterile mosquitoes in bid to curb disease—with promising results [184d]
- Novel point of attack may help us combat dangerous tropical diseases [184d]
- New technique can record gene activity of every single bacterial cell in a colony [184d]
- Turning non-magnetic materials magnetic with atomically thin films [184d]
- The first genetic editing in spiders with CRISPR‐Cas yields colorful silk [184d]
- Q&A: What will it take to bring fusion energy to the US power grid? [184d]
- Clues to accounting fraud are hiding in plain sight [184d]
- Advancing electrocatalyst discovery through the lens of data science [184d]
- Bacterium salvaged from compost could reduce side effects of chemotherapy drugs [184d]
- DNA-like molecule may survive Venus-like cloud conditions [184d]
- Physicists propose a new route by which neutrinos can be produced [184d]
- Waxing and waning prairie: New study unravels causes of ancient climate changes [184d]
- Unpredictable light exposure disrupts biological sex differences in birds [184d]
- Community science helps reveal population growth among SoCal's endangered giant sea bass [184d]
- There's a chorus of gravitational waves coming from the core of the Milky Way. Will we hear them? [184d]
- What shoppers say about sustainability doesn't match how they spend, study finds [184d]
- MAGA's 'war on empathy' might not be original, but it is dangerous [184d]
- A single impact could leave a giant planet ringing for millions of years [184d]
- Shrimp study illuminates new potential for baitless fishing [184d]
- How a 5,000-year-old technology, politics, and culture led to modern wealth inequality [184d]
- X-ray source AX J145732−5901 is a cluster of galaxies, observations suggest [184d]
- A scalable approach to distill quantum features from higher-dimensional entanglement [184d]
- Healthy foods are wasted more often: Study explores why perceptions drive disposal decisions [184d]
- What the shell: scientists marvel as NZ snail lays egg from neck [184d]
- Wolf protection downgrade set for green light in EU [184d]
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