The Brutalist Report - sciencedaily
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- New Nevada experiments will improve monitoring of nuclear explosions [706d]
- New study challenges one-size-fits-all approach to vitamin D supplementation guidelines [706d]
- New eco-friendly lubricant additives protect turbine equipment, waterways [706d]
- For microscopic organisms, ocean currents act as 'expressway' to deeper depths [706d]
- Oil palm plantations are driving massive downstream impact to watershed [706d]
- Scientists track 'doubling' in origin of cancer cells [706d]
- Physicists arrange atoms in extremely close proximity [706d]
- Cost-effective, high-capacity, and cyclable lithium-ion battery cathodes [706d]
- Cancer patients gain important benefits from genome-matched treatments [706d]
- Small molecule shows early-stage promise for repairing myelin sheath damage [706d]
- Human activity is causing toxic thallium to enter the Baltic sea, according to new study [706d]
- Path to easier recycling of solar modules [706d]
- Robots invited to help make wind turbine blades [706d]
- Scent sells -- but the right picture titillates both eyes and nose, research finds [706d]
- Low intensity light to fight the effects of chronic stress [706d]
- Wildfires in wet African forests have doubled in recent decades [706d]
- Dietary changes may treat pulmonary hypertension [706d]
- Scientists test for quantum nature of gravity [706d]
- 'Baby asteroid' just a toddler in space years [706d]
- Stay active -- or get active -- to boost quality of life while aging, study suggests to middle-aged women [706d]
- Sugar-based catalyst upcycles carbon dioxide [706d]
- Deeper understanding of malaria parasite development unlocks opportunities to block disease spread [706d]
- Synchronization between central circadian clock and circadian clocks of tissues preserves their functioning [706d]
- When working out, males are programmed to burn more fat, while females recycle it--at least in rats [706d]
- Random robots are more reliable [706d]
- Significant new discovery in teleportation research -- Noise can improve the quality of quantum teleportation [706d]
- New approach in the synthesis of complex natural substances [706d]
- New sensor detects errors in MRI scans [706d]
- Toxic chemicals can be detected with new AI method [706d]
- Researchers create new chemical compound to solve 120-year-old problem [706d]
- Unveiling a polarized world -- in a single shot [706d]
- Activation of innate immunity: Important piece of the puzzle identified [706d]
- Gene signatures from tissue-resident T cells as a predictive tool for melanoma patients [706d]
- To bend the curve of biodiversity loss, nature recovery must be integrated across all sectors [706d]
- This highly reflective black paint makes objects more visible to autonomous cars [706d]
- Malaria may shorten leukocyte telomeres among sub-Saharan Africans [706d]
- Companies may buy consumer genetic information despite its modest predictive power [706d]
- Wild orangutan treats wound with pain-relieving plant [706d]
- How the brain's arousal center helps control visual attention too [706d]
- Artificial intelligence enhances monitoring of threatened marbled murrelet [706d]
- Scientists identify new treatment target for leading cause of blindness [706d]
- Medical school scientist creates therapy to kill hypervirulent bacteria [706d]
- Microneedles and suction cup for blood diagnostics, modeled on leeches [706d]
- Webb telescope probably didn't find life on an exoplanet -- yet [706d]
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