The Brutalist Report - science
- No new articles in the last 24 hours.
- Extreme botany: Paramotorists soar across remote Peru desert to collect threatened plants [302d]
- Bottled water has a huge and growing toll on human and planetary health, experts warn [302d]
- 'Writing' with atoms could transform materials fabrication for quantum devices [302d]
- Microchip can save millions of liters of milk from going down the drain [302d]
- New insights into hot carrier solar cells: Study explores hot electron tunneling and collection to enhance efficiency [302d]
- Atmospheric methane increase during pandemic due primarily to wetland flooding, satellite data analysis finds [302d]
- Evaluating the flow of information for high-impact weather events [302d]
- Ancient DNA helps uncover the Iberian lynx's potential secret weapon against extinction [302d]
- Signs of hope for endangered Maugean skate [302d]
- Fecal transplants reduce ADHD and anxiety symptoms in dogs with epilepsy, researchers find [302d]
- New rules could help child welfare systems treat parents with disabilities more fairly [302d]
- Violence, harassment from students is overwhelmingly 'part of the job' for Saskatchewan education sector workers [302d]
- War affects girls and boys differently, Democratic Republic of Congo study finds [302d]
- Thermal effects in spintronics systematically assessed for first time [302d]
- Team presents VO₂@VS₂ one-step hydrothermal synthesis for stable and highly efficient Zn-ion storage [302d]
- Mesoamerican oak tree species in urgent need of conservation, says report [302d]
- Researchers unpack sign language's visual advantage [302d]
- Simulating a critical point in quark gluon fluid [302d]
- Report sets out three overlooked opportunities to fund net zero transition [302d]
- Finding the sweet spot: Machine learning reveals factors for successful crowdfunding [302d]
- Records show that churches monitored multilingual gossip in Elizabethan London [302d]
- Researcher overcomes portfolio optimization limitations with new approach [302d]
- Maintaining an essential habitat: What's good for pollinators is good for utility companies too [302d]
- New study reveals a countdown to save oceans from plastic pollution [302d]
- Channel conveyance and flood risk: Are current models missing the mark? [302d]
- AI network shows potential for predicting crop yield [302d]
- High-density monoculture boosts stand biomass in boreal pine plantations: Study [302d]
- Why home insurance rates are rising so fast across the US. Climate change plays a big role [302d]
- Study reveals shifting landscape of UN human rights discourse [302d]
- Whose 'right to suburbia'? New book exposes the banishment and battle for a place in Washington's suburbs [302d]
- First-ever interagency sea level rise website is live [302d]
- LGBTQ+ policies significantly reduce discrimination for transgender and nonbinary people [302d]
- Nitrogen fertilizer for soybeans offers limited yield benefits, study says [302d]
- Scientists studying impact of painting wind turbine blade black to reduce bird collisions [302d]
- Atmospheric blocking slows ocean-driven melting of Greenland's largest glacier tongue [302d]
- New catalyst developed for sustainable propylene production from biomass [302d]
- DNA analysis identifies senior officer from Franklin's ill-fated 1845 expedition [302d]
- Fruit-only diet found to improve bats' immune response to viruses [302d]
- Researchers identify factors affecting crossing structure use by ungulates in China [302d]
- What happens to the climate when Earth passes through interstellar clouds? [302d]
- Obama's 2012 reelection tied to better mental health in educated Black men, study suggests [302d]
- New study reveals how much influence global powers have on the economy [302d]
- Graphene spike mat uses ordinary fridge magnet tech to fight antibiotic resistance [302d]
- In the gateway to the Arctic, fat, ice and polar bears are crucial. All three are in trouble. [302d]
- Two killed in Mexico as Hurricane John weakens to tropical storm [302d]
- 1,000-year-old textiles reveal cultural resilience in the ancient Andes [302d]
- Archaeologists discover southern army fought at 'Europe's oldest battle' [302d]
- Why virtual reality nature can't provide the same wellness benefits as the real thing [302d]
- Discovering new energy levels in atomic hyperfine structures [302d]
- Study shows treed borders around crops provide a base for pollinating, pest-eating hoverflies [302d]
- Quantum sensing approach captures nanoscale electrochemical evolution in battery [302d]
- Studying fossil extraction on Native lands and exploring the depths of untold histories [302d]
- Researchers explore environmental impacts of genetically modified crops [302d]
- How a butterfly invasion minimizes genetic diversity [302d]
- Tree frog tadpoles have a unique way of not contaminating their water supply: Not pooping [302d]
- Better together: Gut microbiome communities found to have enhanced resilience to drugs [302d]
- Feeding coral reefs can aid their recovery from bleaching events [302d]
- Bio-based insecticidal ingredients have the potential to drive ecologically safer pesticides [302d]
- Neutron experiments settle 40-year debate on enzyme for drug design [302d]
- The 'publish or perish' mentality is fueling research paper retractions—and undermining science [302d]
- Spinning artificial spider silk into next-generation medical materials [302d]
- Low-temperature ammonia-to-hydrogen conversion achieved by applying an electric field [302d]
- Yeast chit-chat: How microorganisms communicate food shortages [302d]
- Researchers refute the validity of 'assembly theory of everything' hypothesis [302d]
- Tropical and subtropical industrial fisheries account for about 70% of methylmercury fished from the ocean: Study [302d]
- Research reveals best conditions for storing graphene oxide [302d]
- The internet can be toxic—but there are also online oases where mutual care flourishes [302d]
- Ant queens cannibalize their sick offspring and 'recycle' them, new study reveals [302d]
- Study finds good nutrition boosts honey bee resilience against pesticides, viruses [302d]
- Mechanism behind autophagy trigger unveiled [302d]
- The science of polarization: Model shows what happens when political opponents lose their personal connection [302d]
- Climate models predict abrupt intensification of northern wildfires due to permafrost thawing [302d]
- Improved cement shows promise for protecting coastline ecosystems [302d]
- Who's to blame when climate change turns the lights off? [302d]
- Researchers reveal the reality of lossless energy transport in topological insulators [302d]
- New AI tool efficiently deconvolutes compound-protein interactions [302d]
- Researchers determine female gibbons dance for attention [302d]
- Understanding Antarctica's contribution to sea level rise [302d]
- Archaeologists use AI to find hundreds of geoglyphs in Peru's Nazca Desert [302d]
- Unveiling ancient life: New method sheds light on early cellular and metabolic evolution [302d]
- The importance of wave modeling in predicting climate change's effect on sea ice [302d]
- Extinct volcanoes a 'rich' source of rare earth elements, research suggests [302d]
- New shark species named for late Microsoft co-founder [302d]
- Six initiatives for prioritizing undergraduate student well-being [302d]
- Silage production changes could cut greenhouse gas emissions from agriculture [302d]
- Study inspects unusual behavior of an X-ray binary [302d]
- Imperiled Delta smelt gain 3,400 acres of habitat in largest ever tidal restoration project in California [302d]
- Thousands of turkeys killed in California's Merced County as officials battle avian flu outbreak [302d]
- Team studies the emergence of fluctuating hydrodynamics in chaotic quantum systems [302d]
- With Minnesota's 'forever chemical' ban set to expand, state highlights PFAS-free products [302d]
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- New species of flatworm discovered in the United States [302d]
- First observation of ultra-rare particle decay could uncover new physics [302d]
- Astronomers catch a glimpse of a uniquely inflated and asymmetric exoplanet [302d]
- New study shows that word-initial consonants are systematically lengthened across diverse languages [302d]
- Scientists explore how indoor vertical farming could help future-proof food demand [302d]
- Increasing protein in staple crops could help alleviate global protein shortage [302d]
- Research abounds at the International Space Station [302d]
- Small tsunami waves splash ashore on remote Japanese islands [302d]
- Environmental groups urge EU 'high risk' label for Sarawak [302d]
- Amazon forest loses area the size of Germany and France, fueling fires [302d]
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