The Brutalist Report - science
- Do you speak cat? Take this quiz to find out [84d]
- Where's nature positive? Australia must ensure environment reforms work to restore what's been lost [84d]
- Minnesota schools under stress as they try to serve students' mental health needs [84d]
- Online child sexual exploitation is a rising but misunderstood threat—here's what the experts want you to know [84d]
- How wars ravage the environment—and what international law is doing about it [84d]
- The beauty backfire effect: Being too attractive can hurt fitness influencers, new research shows [84d]
- Ancient Greeks and Romans knew harming the environment could change the climate [84d]
- Deep-sea sponge microbes yield promising molecule to combat salmonid disease [84d]
- Home advantage? How consumers misjudge the environmental impact of imported food [84d]
- Bioinspired dual-phase nanopesticide enables smart controlled release [84d]
- An innovative tool coating could improve the way products—from aerospace to medical devices—are made [84d]
- Island reptiles face extinction before they are even studied, warns global review [84d]
- Asymmetric stress engineering advances current-carrying performance of iron-based superconducting wires [84d]
- Universe's expansion 'is now slowing, not speeding up': Evidence mounts that dark energy weakens over time [84d]
- Brazil's upcoming UN climate summit highlights how tricky climate pledges are to keep [84d]
- Video: Copernicus Sentinel-1D launch [84d]
- Astronomers reveal tasty insights into exoplanet formation using SPAM [84d]
- Engineered membraneless organelles boost bioproduction in Corynebacterium glutamicum [84d]
- Researchers improve marine aerosol remote sensing accuracy using multiangular polarimetry [84d]
- Tiny diatoms, big climate impact: How microscopic skeletons rapidly shape ocean chemistry [84d]
- New environmental DNA test could help rare hammerhead sharks fight extinction [84d]
- Those who work together tend to move in sync, trampoline experiment shows [84d]
- Simulations show Antarctic meltwater slows warming but drives uneven sea level rise [84d]
- The basic mechanisms of visual attention emerged over 500 million years ago, study suggests [84d]
- California surface water costs can triple during drought, underlining need for better management [84d]
- East African Rift study uncovers why breaking up is hard for some continents [84d]
- Researchers discover an 'all-body brain' in sea urchins [84d]
- The 'blue forest' in figures: First global inventory of carbon stored by seagrass meadows [84d]
- Urban fungi show signs of thermal adaptation [84d]
- Extended defects unlock new properties in nanomaterials [84d]
- Chasing and splashing molecules create resilient order from apparent chaos, study shows [84d]
- Female college students fall behind in academic recovery from COVID pandemic [84d]
- Ultrathin racetrack memory devices now work without insulating buffer layers [84d]
- Forests face hotter canopies as projected CO₂ levels drive up leaf temperatures [84d]
- UK law turns a blind eye to the severe financial consequences of being in an abusive relationship, study warns [84d]
- Rabies research unlocks how viruses do so much with so few proteins [84d]
- Euclid peers through dark cloud LDN 1641's dusty veil [84d]
- Should we build an optical interferometer on the moon? [84d]
- UN says forests should form key plank of COP30 [84d]
- Helheim Glacier's massive calving events don't behave the way scientists assumed [84d]
- How phosphorylation helps ward off defects during reproduction [84d]
- Q&A: Measuring temptation one mouse click at a time [84d]
- When irrigation backfires: Global farming practices are driving heat stress and water strain, research warns [84d]
- Solar Orbiter provides first glimpse of the sun's polar magnetic field in motion [84d]
- Many mini-Neptunes once thought to be lava worlds may actually have solid surfaces [84d]
- The problem with 'mega-COPs': Can a 50,000-person conference still tackle climate change? [84d]
- Prepopulated search bars can significantly boost online sales, says marketing study [84d]
- Main driver of Sargassum blooms in the Atlantic Ocean revealed [84d]
- Plasma lens can focus attosecond pulses across different ranges of XUV light [84d]
- Paradox of rotating turbulence finally tamed with 'hurricane-in-a-lab' [84d]
- Double disadvantage hurts more than twice as much when it comes to social isolation, study finds [84d]
- Large ritual constructions by early Mesoamericans may represent the order of the universe [84d]
- Southern Ocean's winter CO₂ outgassing underestimated by 40%, study reveals [84d]
- Research finds writing emotional product reviews increases our brand loyalty [84d]
- Ukraine's massive nature project is helping veterans and land recover [84d]
- Sex for money: Study reveals the harm that 'blessers' can do to young women [84d]
- Sulfur cave spiders build an arachnid megacity and possibly the largest-ever spider web [84d]
- The escape room challenge: How one person's narcissism can undermine a whole team [84d]
- Solar radiation could cool Earth, not replace emissions [84d]
- Nation topped goal of 1 million more STEM graduates over the past decade, analysis finds [84d]
- Pillar-cage fluorinated hybrid porous framework features rare quasi-Johnson solid J₂₈ structure [84d]
- Land degradation outpaces restoration in Africa's Great Green Wall [84d]
- Customers can become more loyal if their banks solve fraud cases, researchers find [84d]
- Two independent quantum networks successfully fused into one [84d]
- Hand gestures that illustrate speech boost persuasiveness, study shows [84d]
- Historical maps reveal 99% loss of meadows in English countryside [84d]
- Ancient mammoth tooth offers clues about Ice Age life in northeastern Canada [84d]
- Lipid nanoparticles that can deliver mRNA directly into heart muscle cells discovered [84d]
- What should countries do with their nuclear waste? Management strategies focus on radionuclide iodine-129 [84d]
- Genome expansion helps plants adapt to tropical environments [84d]
- Are the cosmic voids truly empty? [84d]
- Forest structure and recent infestations drive bark beetle damage clustering in Finland [84d]
- How forest thinning significantly influences the ability of forests to store or release carbon [84d]
- COVID-19 school closures curbed reporting of child violence incidents in Chile, study finds [84d]
- Student motivation may shape study habits, grades [84d]
- Coastal groundwater rivals rivers and volcanoes in shaping ocean chemistry, study finds [84d]
- Aging stars may be destroying their closest planets [84d]
Previous Day