The Brutalist Report - science
- No new articles in the Past 12 Hours.
- Analysis of two decades' worth of antibiotic resistance shows antibiotic use is not the only driver of superbugs [796d]
- Focused ion beam technology: A single tool for a wide range of applications [796d]
- Methane activation by [LnO]+: The 4f orbital matters [796d]
- Don't delay talking to girls about keeping safe online, says report [796d]
- Toxic algae blooms: Study assesses potential health hazards to humans [796d]
- Next-generation wastewater solutions: Utilizing acid-resistant microbes for improved treatment efficiency [796d]
- Even the oldest eukaryote fossils show dazzling diversity and complexity [796d]
- Compensation can cover for loss of cultural heritage in construction projects, researcher finds [796d]
- Chasing the light: Study finds new clues about warming in the Arctic [796d]
- Deepen your empathy by reading more and reading more often, linguist says [796d]
- A single-celled microbe is helping corals survive climate change, study finds [796d]
- Female business leaders need better support to thrive in times of crisis [796d]
- Year-end survey spotlights food safety, age-related consumer behavior, out-of-stock trends [796d]
- Social scientist: While providing help inspires others, people would rather help a family member than a neighbor [796d]
- A guide on how to use climate data to inform human adaptation [796d]
- Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope detects surprise gamma-ray feature beyond our galaxy [796d]
- Archeologists map lost cities in Ecuadorian Amazon, settlements that lasted 1,000 years [796d]
- Molecularly designing polymer networks to control sound damping [796d]
- Review covers optical aspects of quantitative photoacoustic tomography [796d]
- Study discovers how a system of proteins helps Salmonella survive inside macrophages [796d]
- The first assessment of toxic heavy metal pollution in the Southern Hemisphere over the last 2,000 years [796d]
- Communicating about climate change more effective when stories of displaced hit 'close to home' [796d]
- More aerosol particles than thought are forming over Siberia, finds study [796d]
- New rice lines for Africa offer virus protection [796d]
- Impact Craters: Can they help us find life elsewhere? [796d]
- Since Roe was overturned, fewer Michigan adults want to have children [796d]
- Another example of a fantastic Einstein ring [796d]
- Researchers release open-source space debris model [796d]
- Do former regulators improve the quality of audits? [796d]
- Declining primate numbers are threatening Brazil's Atlantic forest [796d]
- Using 'Kerr solitons' to boost the power of transmission electron microscopes [796d]
- Image: Micro-world within an atomic clock [796d]
- A global study reveals pathways to save threatened sharks, despite rising mortality trends [796d]
- Carbon dioxide pipelines demystified: Balancing potentials, pitfalls for a sustainable future [796d]
- Glaciers rise, fall and melt with tides [796d]
- Global heating may breach 1.5°C in 2024—here's what that could look like [796d]
- #FreeBritney movement is proof social media can help shift the narrative, research finds [796d]
- Scientists investigate how heat rises through Europa's ocean [796d]
- New equations will better estimate protein utilization by beef cattle, benefit producers [796d]
- Church without God: How secular congregations fill a need for some nonreligious Americans [796d]
- NASA scientists discover a novel galactic 'fossil' [796d]
- In the Wild West of corporate space travel, humans could return to the moon. But does it bring diplomatic challenges? [796d]
- War in Europe is more than 5,000 years old, researchers find [796d]
- US–Indian satellite will monitor Earth's changing frozen regions [796d]
- A new type of plant metalloreductase maintains root growth under low phosphorus [796d]
- Transferring laser-induced graphene at extremely low temperatures for ultrathin bioelectronics [796d]
- How diverse are US ocean science institutions? [796d]
- Brazilian semi-arid biome could lose over 90% of mammal species by 2060 [796d]
- How magnetization direction can be controlled using strain in an interfacial multiferroic material [796d]
- A princess's psalter recovered? Pieces of a 1,000-year-old manuscript found [796d]
- Tahoe avalanche: What causes seemingly safe snow slopes to collapse? A physicist and avid skier explains [796d]
- Climate change spells disaster for termite-loving numbats [796d]
- Mating anchovies stir up the sea as much as a major storm—and it's good for the environment, too [796d]
- To protect endangered sharks and rays, scientists are mapping these species' most important locations [796d]
- 7 strategies to help gifted autistic students succeed in college [796d]
- Study shows otters, beavers and other semiaquatic mammals keep clean underwater, thanks to their flexible fur [796d]
- Researcher: Healthy cities aren't a question of boring or exciting buildings but about creating better public space [796d]
- 'Legal animism': When a river or even nature itself goes to court [796d]
- Researcher: Mothers are more likely to work worse jobs—while fathers thrive in careers [796d]
- Extreme UK flood levels are happening much more often than they used to, analysis shows [796d]
- Why AI software 'softening' accents is problematic [796d]
- Provincial policies on campus sexual violence are inconsistent across Canada, say researchers [796d]
- Scientists uncover ocean's intricate web of microbial interactions across different depths [796d]
- The first 3D map of magnetic fields in our galaxy explains star-forming regions [796d]
- Tidal disruption events and what they can reveal about black holes and stars in distant galaxies [796d]
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