The Brutalist Report - science
- New technique rapidly identifies high-performing enzymes for sustainable biomanufacturing [220d]
- Discovery of 'mini halo' points to how the early universe was formed [221d]
- Researchers uncover cause of uranium groundwater contamination [221d]
- Nearly half of New Jerseyans say state is on wrong track, citing taxes, affordability and cost of living [221d]
- Mild to moderate harmful algal bloom predicted for western Lake Erie [221d]
- Nanodomains hold the key to next-generation solar cells, researchers find [221d]
- Timely KNL2 degradation is critical for maintaining genome stability in plants [221d]
- New research aims to better predict and understand cascading land surface hazards [221d]
- New teachers' impact on equitable science learning [221d]
- Mist and sea spray create unique conditions for urea to form from simple gases [221d]
- A statistical analysis of exoplanet habitability turns up one great candidate [221d]
- Study shows that apes are more optimistic after hearing laughter [221d]
- Rolling for science: Mars orbiter learns new moves after nearly 20 years in space [221d]
- The galactic center isn't spitting out stars; here's what this means [221d]
- Friendships between queer people can improve well-being—but there's nuance [221d]
- These Canadian rocks may be the oldest on Earth [221d]
- New gravity mission will detect weakening ocean conveyor [221d]
- Combining archaeology and genetics may shed light on how ideas traveled further than people in Anatolia [221d]
- Citizen scientists find new eclipsing binary stars [221d]
- Charge-spin coupling in room-temperature 2D ferromagnetic material [221d]
- Echoes of grief: Macaques appear to mourn their loved ones like humans do [221d]
- British ash woodland is evolving resistance to ash dieback, researchers discover [221d]
- Scientists capture slow-motion earthquake in action [221d]
- Ancient squids dominated the ocean 100 million years ago, fossil discovery technique reveals [221d]
- Affordable, highly efficient cold boxes poised to help tackle food waste for small farmers in East Africa [221d]
- Personal care products may be toxic to aquatic life, study warns [221d]
- Ferritin protein can be used to separate critical metals from electronic waste [221d]
- Unmasking hazardous compounds in cosmetics, skincare products and perfumes [221d]
- AI-enhanced maps reveal hidden streams for restoration [221d]
- Boomerang found in Poland may be oldest ever reported [221d]
- Grilling with lump charcoal: Is US-grown hardwood really in that bag? [221d]
- UK asylum system 'exhausts by design,' harming mental health, study finds [221d]
- Ocean warming patterns key to accurate tropical cyclone climate projections [221d]
- Avocado pruning residue can transform into biological additive to stabilize emulsions [221d]
- The ongoing impact of California's Eaton Fire on mothers [221d]
- From brewery to pharma: Brewer's yeast engineered to produce therapeutic peptides [221d]
- Magnetic chains on superconductors: New heterostructure design advances quantum technology [221d]
- Webb telescope digs into structural origins of disk galaxies [221d]
- Scientists revive legendary golden sea silk using Korean pen shell byssus [221d]
- Flowering plants use a pseudoenzyme to form indole [221d]
- Simulations show why grains in metals and ceramics grow the way they do [221d]
- New IQ research shows why smarter people make better decisions [221d]
- What if universal rental assistance were implemented to deal with the housing crisis? [221d]
- Using TikTok could be making you more politically polarized, new study finds [221d]
- Yelp's addition of a 'Black-owned' tag led to a slight drop in business ratings in Detroit [221d]
- Self-censorship and the 'spiral of silence': Why Americans are less likely to publicly voice their political opinions [221d]
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