The Brutalist Report - science
- Wood-eating clams use their poop to dominate their habitat: Study [998d]
- When using virtual reality as a teaching tool, context and 'feeling real' matter [998d]
- Artificial intelligence helps Brazilian breeders select desired traits of native fish [998d]
- A pressure-sensitive device capable of characterizing gases using structural colors [998d]
- First comprehensive assessment of effectiveness of tertiary treatment processes in removing emerging contaminants [998d]
- A birefringence-managed normal-dispersion fiber laser delivering energy-tunable chirp-free solitons [998d]
- Visualization of the deforming atomic wavefunction with attosecond time-resolved photoelectron holography [998d]
- The value of people's values: Study shows how relational values contribute towards sustainability [998d]
- Developing a standoff coherent Raman spectrometer [998d]
- Relativistic mirror made of plasma at kilohertz repetition rate [998d]
- Mammals island-hopped from Australia to colonize the world, claims paper [998d]
- Researchers synthesize new compound for production of plastics [998d]
- Astronomers discover two potentially habitable exo-Earths around a star near the sun [998d]
- Audits can bring bad news or benefits to small businesses [998d]
- New research on antibiotic-resistant bacteria may be a step toward new treatments for infections [998d]
- Game theory shows why sexual misconduct is underreported [998d]
- Climate change belief not split along political divide [998d]
- Better digital tools could help immigrants access benefits [998d]
- Astronomers make most extensive study yet of young stars' magnetic activity [998d]
- Greenland's glaciers might be melting 100 times as fast as previously thought [998d]
- South cleans up from tornadoes as blizzards advance north [998d]
- Claudine Gay named first Black president of Harvard [998d]
- Why New Year's resolutions fail, even though people know how they can succeed [998d]
- Pitch-perfect: Study of World Cup's turfgrass may help crops yield more from less [998d]
- Adult children more likely to be estranged from dad than mom, national study finds [998d]
- Scientists create chemical compound that can reverse effects of methamphetamine and fentanyl [998d]
- Screening a puppy's DNA methylome may help predict how energetic or fearful they will be [998d]
- Experts from 14 nations discuss global gene drive project registry [998d]
- Dynamical fractal discovered in clean magnetic crystal [998d]
- Christmas-colored droplets hint at solutions for fog harvesting [998d]
- Concentrations of psychoactive compounds in mushrooms found to be extremely variable [998d]
- Study investigates 'virgin birth' in aquarium sharks, even when potential mates are nearby [998d]
- Social ties can increase salary for low-wage workers [998d]
- Plastic pollution kills sea urchin larvae, shows study [998d]
- Wearable electronics could soon be made with a starch-based material to prevent e-waste [998d]
- Scientists develop a method to allow trees to flower in mere months [998d]
- Gender or biological sex not as decisive in economic decision-making as previously thought, study finds [998d]
- How a policy to address a groundwater shortage inadvertently increased air pollution in northern India [998d]
- Happy people spend less on consumption, study suggests [998d]
- Hot salt, clean energy: How artificial intelligence can enhance advanced nuclear reactors [998d]
- Comet impacts could bring ingredients for life to Europa's ocean [998d]
- Study probes how plague spreads through wild rodent populations [998d]
- Harnessing smartphones to track how people use green spaces [998d]
- Starvation shown to cause cell remodeling [998d]
- Viewpoint: With historic droughts on the rise, we must reclaim our water [998d]
- Timber demand could help save forests [998d]
- Why can't we replace sniffer dogs with electronic noses? [998d]
- New book examines tallgrass prairies' ecological history, effects on Indigenous cultures [998d]
- First images released from NOAA-21 VIIRS instrument [998d]
- For credit rating agencies, reputation matters [998d]
- New study shows trends of lymphoproliferative disease among Maine wild turkeys [998d]
- Hubble's sparkling new view of the Carina Nebula [998d]
- Can we hack DNA to grow more food for a hotter, hungry planet? [998d]
- NASA sensors to help detect methane emitted by landfills [998d]
- Landscape ecological history supports rewilding for biodiversity conservation and climate mitigation in Mediterranean [998d]
- How do you treat untreatable infections? Do what the microbes do [998d]
- Lettuce arrives in Florida this week to fight feared return of manatee starvation [998d]
- Looking to work in a bank? Better hide those tattoos and piercings [998d]
- Simplifying a method that prevents premature degradation of drugs in the body [998d]
- Early green, early brown: Climate change leads to earlier senescence in alpine plants [998d]
- NASA's Webb Space Telescope unveils young stars in early stages of formation [998d]
- Twenty new gurgling and creaking frog species from Madagascar named [998d]
- Bighorn sheep to get drinking stations as drought becomes new normal [998d]
- Learning from the past, fighting for the future: A history of reproductive rights [998d]
- New methodology for the synthesis of benzazepines [998d]
- Report highlights decline of insect taxonomists across Europe [998d]
- New strategy proposed for ultra-long cycle lithium-ion battery [998d]
- A shield for 2D materials that adds vibrations to reduce vibration problems [998d]
- Tiny flakes tell a story of tool use 300,000 years ago [998d]
- An X-ray step towards superfast nanoelectronics [998d]
- Orangutans and gorillas are able to make economically rational decisions, find researchers [998d]
- Recycling carbon emissions could be key climate solution but won't be easy, report to Congress says [998d]
- Harmful fungal toxins in wheat are a growing threat, says study [998d]
- Testing the stress levels of rescued koalas allows us to tweak their care so more survive in the wild [998d]
- Netflix's 'Ancient Apocalypse' is more fiction than fact, say experts [998d]
- Record low water levels on the Mississippi River in 2022 show how climate change is altering large rivers [998d]
- Using the power of symmetry for new quantum technologies [998d]
- Are prices real? How ghosts of calculus and physics influenced what we pay for things today [998d]
- Insects may feel pain, says growing evidence: Here's what this means for animal welfare laws [998d]
- Climate report: Earth saw its 9th-warmest November in 143 years [998d]
- Nuclear fusion: how scientists can turn latest breakthrough into a new clean power source [998d]
- Spotting plastic waste from space and counting the fish in the seas: here's how AI can help protect the oceans [998d]
- 'Peekabo' dwarf galaxy is extremely metal-poor, study finds [998d]
- Could life survive on frigid exo-Earths? Maybe under ice sheets [998d]
- 1.5°C: where the target came from—and why we're losing sight of its importance [998d]
- How Indigenous philosophies can improve the way Canadians treat animals [998d]
- Social media always remembers—which makes moving on from a breakup that much harder [998d]
- London Underground polluted with metallic particles small enough to enter human bloodstream [998d]
- Insights get the right fish on the right plate [998d]
- Healthier diets for astronauts on spaceflights may improve health and performance [998d]
- Can sending fewer emails or emptying your inbox really help fight climate change? [998d]
- Whales could be a valuable carbon sink, say scientists [998d]
- Astronomers find that two exoplanets may be mostly water [998d]
- It's colossal: Creating the world's largest dilution refrigerator [998d]
- Russian space capsule leak likely caused by micrometeorite [998d]
- Israeli technology aims to curb male chick culling [998d]
- Rosin powder can help maintain more constant friction when pitching a baseball [998d]
- Mega-predator likely wasn't underwater hunter, researchers argue [998d]
- Research disputes claims that culture affects basic visual perception [998d]
- Scientists' use of hydrogel materials leads to stem cells developing like human embryos [998d]
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