The Brutalist Report - science
- Tree mortality from insects is rising across Europe [81d]
- Study: Employee burnout levels drop significantly when companies deploy personalized mobile-based interventions [81d]
- Earthshot prize's request for a vegan menu for Prince William leaves a bitter taste in the Amazon [81d]
- Reef restoration shouldn't just be about growing corals—but also bringing reefs to life, new study suggests [81d]
- Human rights breaches precede mass atrocities [81d]
- Researcher calls for new UN ocean agency to tackle global sustainability crisis [81d]
- Cover crops hold key to healthier soils in Norwegian agriculture [81d]
- We've done the science—let's get on with climate action [81d]
- Global move towards plant-based diets could reshape farming jobs and reduce labor costs worldwide [81d]
- Signatures meant more in Mesopotamia than they do now: What cylinder seals say about ancient and modern life [81d]
- Large brains require warm bodies and big offspring in vertebrates, study finds [81d]
- Tissue 'tipping points': How cells collectively switch from healthy to disease states [81d]
- Brains and stock markets follow the same rules in crisis, study finds [81d]
- Students' time on school bus may affect their academic engagement with school, classmates and teachers [81d]
- Painting memory: Lithuanian researchers explore how street art shapes urban identity [81d]
- High-resolution CMIP6 models shown to better capture long-term precipitation trends in high mountain Asia [81d]
- Metal contamination reaches 'critical' level in Peruvian highlands, researchers warn [81d]
- Radiocarbon analysis of turfgrasses can help cities measure greenhouse gas emissions [81d]
- Global initiative advances next-generation light sensors based on emerging materials [81d]
- Q&A: Rainfall tipping point predicts drought risk for crops [81d]
- Video: Seas of the Sun, the story of Cluster [81d]
- 'Self-tuning' film paves the way for future wireless and radar devices [81d]
- To disclose or not to disclose good deeds, that is the do-gooder dilemma [81d]
- Extreme heat is driving up property prices in Spain's cooler northern regions [81d]
- Plants under stress: How rye rearranges its genes [81d]
- Researchers develop a cold-resistant tomato variety without compromising plant growth [81d]
- Scientists recreate cosmic 'fireballs' to probe mystery of missing gamma rays [81d]
- Popularity remains important among young adults too. 'Not just something for children.' [81d]
- Engineered E. coli use direct, cell-to-cell contact to grow into new structures [81d]
- Novel technique reveals insights into soil microbe alarm clock [81d]
- Indigenous fire sovereignty aims to bring 'fire regime' back to Native lands [81d]
- Legal flexibility helps UNESCO Biospheres boost nature conservation and human well-being [81d]
- Animal communication: Framework tests which audible components serve an alerting function [81d]
- When slowing down pays off: Physicists reveal surprising insights from taxi drivers [81d]
- Automated chloroplast screening platform speeds up crop trait development [81d]
- Global study reveals soaring freshwater demand in material production [81d]
- Soft gel advance enables lab-grown slow-twitch muscles [81d]
- Tiles, leaves and cotton strips examined to measure river health [81d]
- When speaking out feels risky: New study maps hidden dynamics of self-censorship [81d]
- Bacterial enzyme structure reveals new path for renewable plastic [81d]
- Powerful tool can map gene regulation at single-nucleotide resolution [81d]
- Versatile gene-switch tool uses non-toxic molecule for safer research [81d]
- Q&A: A cookbook to bring underused crops to the kitchen [81d]
- VDAC1 protein can override inhibitor to unleash programmed cell death [81d]
- How silver iodide triggers ice formation at the atomic level [81d]
- Human astrovirus exploits same cell receptor site as antibodies, study reveals [81d]
- Marine DNA exposes massive gaps in ocean maps and finds fish in unexpected places [81d]
- Involving women in peace deals reduces chance of a conflict restarting by up to 37% [81d]
- How narcissism ruins teamwork, and why it matters in the workplace [81d]
- Why do some of us love AI, while others hate it? The answer is in how our brains perceive risk and trust [81d]
- Life after death: How earthworms keep facilitating carbon capture [81d]
- Pixelized galaxy cluster strong lens modeling improves precision of Hubble constant measurement [81d]
- Plant-like complexity evolved multiple times in different algae lineages, phylogenomics study reveals [81d]
- Modeling black holes is easier with a flicker of light [81d]
- Bacteria reveal hidden powers of electricity transfer [81d]
- Refined radar technique improves accuracy of hurricane wind estimates after landfall [81d]
- Bacteria that could provide an early warning of blue-green algae toxicity identified [81d]
- First observation of single top quark production with W and Z bosons [81d]
- Chemists find clues to the origins of buckyballs in space [81d]
- Crop production in 155 countries relies on forests in other nations, moisture flows reveal [81d]
- CERN's electrostatic trap 'recycles' anions to illuminate the heaviest elements [81d]
- Ancient gene variants in an Alpine plant control its flowering [81d]
- Herring return to their birthplaces for spawning, genetic study shows [81d]
- Reimagining biocatalysis: Turning DNA phosphates into chiral catalysts [81d]
- Boys, bullying and belonging: Understanding violent initiation at a South African school [81d]
- Room-temperature 3D-printing enables miniaturized infrared sensors [81d]
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