The Brutalist Report - science
- No new articles in the Past 12 Hours.
- Brazil seeks to assert itself as an environmental and food power, but can't overcome its extractive industries [70d]
- Scientists directly observe diffusion behavior within individual nanostructures [70d]
- Bacteriophages: The hidden facilitators in kimchi fermentation [70d]
- How dark energy changed cosmology forever [70d]
- How much CO₂ does your flight really produce? How to know if carbon footprint claims are accurate [70d]
- Social media use soars as kids drop sports, reading and the arts [70d]
- Archaeologists reveal second-largest Roman olive oil mill in the Roman Empire [70d]
- New study shows why clothing take-back programs fail—and what truly moves consumers to act [70d]
- Team studies beryllium-7 variations over Antarctic regions of the Southern Ocean [70d]
- Ape ancestors and Neanderthals likely kissed, new analysis finds [70d]
- Low-fat vegan diet can reduce an individual's greenhouse gas emissions by 51% [70d]
- Almost half of Oregon elk population carries advantageous genetic variant against chronic wasting disease, study shows [70d]
- Bird flu cases are on the rise again, including 2 million turkeys: Will that affect Thanksgiving dinner? [70d]
- Enzyme-free approach gently detaches cells from culture surfaces [70d]
- Why mysterious structures within Earth's mantle hold clues to life here [70d]
- Collaboration completes richest observation run of gravitational signals to date [70d]
- Ancient and colonial legacies continue to shape Amazon forest biodiversity today [70d]
- Hollow glass fiber sensors withstand extreme radiation in particle accelerator tests [70d]
- A new way for coastal planners to explore the costs of rising seas [70d]
- Nature-inspired solution softens impacts of hard coastal structures [70d]
- CT scans reveal hidden details of ancient copper smelting in early Iran [70d]
- Hayfeeders and other tools can improve health, welfare of stabled horses [70d]
- First complete genome of Faba Granja Asturiana legume variety released [70d]
- Researchers launch new Kansas Flood Mapping Dashboard [70d]
- How bacteria 'feel' surfaces: Fluorescent probe visualizes and quantifies membrane tension [70d]
- PFAS in ski wax: Forever chemicals hit the slopes [70d]
- Physicists drive antihydrogen breakthrough at CERN with record trapping technique [70d]
- New cable design mitigates flaws in superconducting wires [70d]
- Disputed Jordan codices reveal age variations under ion-beam scrutiny [70d]
- Stars forge elements in new, uncharted ways: Experimental physicist discusses the 'i-process' [70d]
- Toilets can make Africa's roads safer, according to this new study [70d]
- Looking inside a well-preserved Neanderthal nose to solve a mystery about our ancestors' faces [70d]
- What teenagers want adults to know about their digital lives [70d]
- Searching for exoplanets in the remnants of a dwarf galaxy [70d]
- How three runaway stars solved a galactic mystery [70d]
- Quantum teleportation between photons from two distant light sources achieved [70d]
- Wine grape still carries molecular memory of its ancestry after 400 years, study finds [70d]
- Many displaced girls in Uganda trapped in cycles of sexual, physical violence [70d]
- Black student unions are under pressure. Here's what they do and how they help Black students find community [70d]
- Research breakthroughs often come through collaborations. Attacks on academic freedom threaten this vital work [70d]
- Black families pay more to keep their houses warm than average American families [70d]
- Quantum-centric supercomputing simulates supramolecular interactions [70d]
- Researchers decode the chemistry behind a deadly genetic disorder [70d]
- How a genetic circuit may have helped the evolution of insect wings [70d]
- Nanoparticles promise swift Vibrio control for safer seafood and healthier fish [70d]
- A 'problem' leads to potential solutions for injured reptiles [70d]
- Humans are evolved for nature, not cities, say anthropologists [70d]
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