The Brutalist Report - science
- Reed beds offer eco-friendly solution for sludge pollution management [122d]
- Seeing the 'big picture': Researchers find storytelling could be key to meaningful life [122d]
- New protocol measures 5G radiation from phones and base stations [122d]
- NASA anticipates lunar findings from next-generation retroreflector [122d]
- Nanoparticle technique gauges bite force in tiny C. elegans worms [122d]
- New computational model can predict antibody structures more accurately [122d]
- Small wins for mice in early life can lead to inequality in adulthood [122d]
- Bats surf storm fronts during continental migration [122d]
- Certain bacteria perform a trick that could keep plants healthy [122d]
- Detecting disease with a single molecule: Nanopore-based sensors could transform diagnostics [122d]
- Genetic mechanism of alternating sexes in walnut trees has some parallels to sex determination in humans [122d]
- Gene expression study reveals human brain cell types becoming more specialized, not just more numerous [122d]
- Starlight to sight: Researchers develop short-wave infrared technology to allow starlight detection [122d]
- Secret lab developing UK's first quantum clock [122d]
- Modern slavery is endemic in global supply chains. Companies should be praised, not shamed, for detecting it [122d]
- Rock art acoustics: South African study suggests that a distinct echo attracted ancient artists back to one site [122d]
- Research on Colombian peace accord shows that addressing gender issues strengthens peace agreements [122d]
- Why we need to transform the Arctic Ocean into a North Pole marine reserve [122d]
- In the Arctic, planting more trees actually makes the world warmer [122d]
- 'We can't believe you would just trust us': Why social assistance shouldn't come with strings attached [122d]
- Opinion: In 2025, let's make it game on—not game over—for the natural world [122d]
- Celebrity boxing matches and 'doping-legal Olympics': The increasingly blurred line between sports and entertainment [122d]
- Learning to be an entrepreneur means building connections as well as studying business [122d]
- HYPSO-2 satellite monitors harmful algae from space [122d]
- Small milk fat globules promote growth of good bacteria, study reveals [122d]
- Scientists reveal the distribution pattern of butterfly diversity in China [122d]
- Wildfire activity surged during Ice Age's abrupt climate shifts, study suggests [122d]
- Diversifying DNA origami: Generative design tool relies on grammar rules for finding best shape [122d]
- Building better infrared sensors: Novel photodiode design boosts responsivity [122d]
- Red attire's competitive edge has faded in combat sports, new study finds [122d]
- Dogs sniff out devastating spotted lanternflies for early detection [122d]
- Feeling 'hoodwinked' erodes trust in employee relations, observational study reveals [122d]
- Unlocking Spirulina secrets to supercharge vaccines [122d]
- Bioreactor allows automated long-term culturing of stem cells [122d]
- Passive radar breaks new ground in avalanche detection [122d]
- Can animals make 'art?' These examples from nature suggest so [122d]
- Sustainable consumption: Too expensive for the poor, not enough for the wealthy [122d]
- Quantity over quality? Different bees are attracted to different floral traits [122d]
- From e-waste to gold: A pathway to CO₂ sustainability [122d]
- New device's radio waves reveal lead contamination in soil [122d]
- Yellowstone's volcanic activity is shifting to the northeast, geologists find [122d]
- Magmatic fluids and melts may lie beneath dormant German volcanoes [122d]
- New study highlights overlap of solar energy potential and critical habitats in the Southwest [122d]
- Too many men or too few women?—new study finds how gender gap is framed affects perceptions of it [122d]
- How having a baby makes it more likely Australian couples rely on the man's income [122d]
- Humans will soon be able to mine on the moon—but should we? Four questions to consider [122d]
- Mind-bending, body-snatching, blood-sucking: Parasites are bizarre yet vital for life on Earth [122d]
- Is it possible to have an eco-friendly firework display? [122d]
- A new mission watches meteoroids hit the far side of the moon [122d]
- Bacteria to the rescue: A sustainable solution for growing organoids [122d]
- New Glenn NG-1 rocket completes a hotfire test [122d]
- Summer rainfall increasing over parts of the US [122d]
- A long-term lunar infrastructure hub named after the object that created the moon [122d]
- Eco-friendly chlorine method could transform drug and chemical production [122d]
- North Carolina's coastal tourism could decline due to salty tap water [122d]
- Discovery of rare new fossil sheds light on New Zealand's extinct dolphin-like reptiles [122d]
- Deep neural networks enhance fragrance design with scent predictions [122d]
- Two luminous flares detected from a nearby tidal disruption event [122d]
- Africa: Better roads promote greater dietary diversity [122d]
- How does a hula hoop master gravity? Mathematicians prove that body shape matters [122d]
- Unusual binary system hosts a massive fast-spinning white dwarf [122d]
- Scientists are discovering the deepest evolutionary secrets of Australia's marsupial mole [122d]
- Major new footprint discoveries on Britain's 'dinosaur highway' [123d]
- Researchers solve 200-year-old volcanic mystery [123d]
- 2024 was China's hottest year on record: weather agency [123d]
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