The Brutalist Report - science
- How we created a climate change museum to inspire hope among eco-distressed students [107d]
- AI quake tools forecast aftershock risk in seconds, study shows [107d]
- Folklore sheds light on ancient Indian savannas [107d]
- Dying reefs threaten Florida's future [107d]
- Nontraditional benefits play key role in retaining under-35 government health worker [107d]
- Scientists unveil mechanism behind greener ammonia production [107d]
- How neighborhoods can work to address rise in black bear encounters [107d]
- It's a bird, it's a drone, it's both: AI tech monitors turkey behavior [107d]
- Study highlights gaps in avalanche safety awareness among snowshoers and winter hikers [107d]
- Virus battles drug-resistant infections [107d]
- Tiny fee on Minneapolis carbon pollution won't do much for the climate, warns expert [107d]
- Long-term cattle performance focus of research review, call for collaboration [107d]
- Report finds Swedish coffee habits surpass beef in Amazon deforestation impact [107d]
- Traumatic events in communities can make organizations more risk-averse [107d]
- DNA shape and rigidity regulate key players of gene expression [107d]
- Greener cryptocurrencies less volatile as they react less to energy price movements, says researcher [107d]
- How multitrophic interactions alleviate phosphorus limitation in subtropical ecosystems [107d]
- Researchers develop a system that helps block illegal timber from entering the EU market [107d]
- Examining why some species developed consciousness while others remained non-conscious [107d]
- Microbial innovation and engineering design offer fresh solutions for plastic waste [107d]
- Contrails are a major driver of aviation's climate impact, study shows [107d]
- From tides to precipitation swings, flux plays a crucial, changing role in ecosystems worldwide [107d]
- Oceanographers present conceptual framework to determine what happens to carbon as it sinks through the ocean [107d]
- European agricultural greenhouse gas emissions can be reduced by 40% without compromising food security, says study [107d]
- Scientists map 3D structure of ZAK protein involved in cellular stress response [107d]
- Boeing's troubled capsule won't carry astronauts on next space station flight [107d]
- Innovative tool offers palm owners, growers new line of defense against trunk rot, protecting iconic trees [107d]
- 'Incels' under scrutiny: Study exposes community of men who demand sex and hate women [107d]
- Climate change links Tibetan lakes to Yangtze River, fueling flood risks [107d]
- Three key pathways identified for scaling up actionable climate knowledge [107d]
- Bats help control crop pests when natural habitats are near farmland [107d]
- Study finds protected areas deepen personal connections to nature and community [107d]
- Magnetically reconfigurable ribbons let scientists 'program' liquids on demand [107d]
- Boiling oceans may lurk beneath the ice of solar system's smallest moons [107d]
- Biobased concrete substitute can give coastal restoration a natural boost [107d]
- RNA 'editing' process offers new clues to why some animals live longer [107d]
- Malaria parasites move along right-handed helices to navigate host tissues, research reveals [107d]
- Cities missing out on nature-based solutions that could boost climate resilience, experts warn [107d]
- Ancient seafloor lava rubble stores vast amounts of carbon dioxide, researchers discover [107d]
- England's national curriculum review misses opportunity to revitalize language learning [107d]
- Why hosting the UN climate summit in the Amazon was so important, despite the disappointing outcome [107d]
- Fishing for phages in botanical gardens [107d]
- 'Quiet piggy' and other slurs: Powerful men fuel online abuse against women in politics and media [107d]
- Most modern dogs have detectable wolf ancestry, including the tiny chihuahua [107d]
- Ancient wolves on remote Baltic Sea island reveal link to prehistoric humans [107d]
- Golden retriever and human behaviors are driven by same genes, researchers discover [107d]
- Scientists detect new climate pattern in the tropics [107d]
- South Africa's G20 presidency: Diplomatic victory, but a weak final declaration [107d]
- Sloshing ferrofluids harness vibration energy: A new spin on powering tomorrow's wearables and IoT [107d]
- Kelp farming is expensive, but a new resource points to lower costs [107d]
- Antimicrobial resistance risks from bacteria in 'Trojan horse' amoebae [107d]
- Researchers model how encapsulation shapes the evolution of living cells [107d]
- Satellite mapping reveals rapid shifts in Antarctic glacier grounding lines [107d]
- Higher resolution climate models show 41% increase in daily extreme land precipitation by 2100 [107d]
- Fossil fuel emissions accelerate winter rainfall changes across Europe by 23 years [107d]
- Targeted inheritance of sex improves animal breeding [107d]
- New p-wave magnet with helix spin structure could enable smaller computer chips [107d]
- International research team discovers a potential source of abiotic methane in the Arctic Ocean [107d]
- X-ray technique captures footage of crystals growing in liquid metal [107d]
- Tectonic regimes of terrestrial planets could explain Earth and Venus's divergence [107d]
- Revolutionary CO₂ conversion system cuts energy use and triples formic acid production [107d]
- Endangered lemurs face new threat from the luxury meat trade [107d]
- Mapping our deep-rooted relationship with medicinal plants [107d]
- Zooplankton in the Nile: Diversity under threat from dams [107d]
- From invasive species tracking to water security: What's lost with federal funding cuts? [107d]
- Nonprofit news outlets are often scared that selling ads could jeopardize their tax-exempt status [107d]
- AI is making spacecraft propulsion more efficient, and could even lead to nuclear-powered rockets [107d]
- Mid-Atlantic mushroom foragers collect 160 species for food, medicine, art and science [107d]
- How technology is reshaping children's development: The good, the bad and the unknown [107d]
- HMS Pandora is Australia's most scientifically excavated shipwreck—yet it still holds secrets [107d]
- Plastic 'bio-beads' from sewage plants are polluting the oceans and spreading superbugs—but there are alternatives [107d]
- Tiny copepod reveals that gene location influences natural selection [107d]
- We created health guidelines for fighting loneliness: Here's what we recommend [107d]
- Report: Women's representation in hotel management stagnates while Black leadership declines [107d]
- Strangulation laws potentially saved 1,500 lives [107d]
- How cancer cells tolerate missing chromosomes [107d]
- Antarctic mountains could boost ocean carbon absorption as ice sheets thin [107d]
- School matters: Resource program curbs high absenteeism rate [107d]
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