The Brutalist Report - science
- The Erie Canal: How a 'big ditch' transformed America's economy, culture and even religion [101d]
- New study reveals how illegal wildlife trade intersects with organized crime in Canada [101d]
- 'Slums' of Victorian Manchester housed wealthy doctors and engineers, study reveals [101d]
- Why is Halloween starting so much earlier each year? A business professor explains [101d]
- How AI can improve storm surge forecasts to help save lives [101d]
- Microbes at Red Sea vents show how life and geology shape each other [101d]
- Long-term data-driven evidence reveals escalating rainfall extremes across urbanizing Himalayan foothills [101d]
- Rare bumble bee's downfall began long before effects from humans, study says [101d]
- Big claws, big costs: Trade-offs in crayfish signaling [101d]
- New AI model for drug design brings more physics to bear in predictions [101d]
- Under pressure: How a synchrotron helped reveal hidden differences in our DNA packaging [101d]
- Simple stabilizing solution leads to seven new ceramic materials [101d]
- Chemical networks can mimic nervous systems to power movement in soft materials [101d]
- Artificial intelligence supercharges science on the Antarctic seafloor [101d]
- AI-based system automatically detects and tracks river plastics [101d]
- UK research warns of trust erosion in criminal justice system [101d]
- Novel fungal phyla and classes revealed by eDNA long reads [101d]
- Ecologists report spread of disease-carrying mosquitoes and their hybrids in North America [101d]
- How a pathogen disables plants' early warning system and kills crops [101d]
- Female canaries, which typically do not sing, have the ability to do so throughout their entire lives [101d]
- A mathematical 'Rosetta Stone' translates and predicts the larger effects of molecular systems [101d]
- National study finds public Montessori programs strengthen early learning outcomes—at sharply lower costs [101d]
- What goes up must come down: The 'universal thermal performance curve' that shackles evolution [101d]
- Giant magnetofossils suggest ancient ocean life had built-in 'GPS' and may shed light on Mars particles [101d]
- A seed bank in England marks 25 years of preserving the world's plant diversity [101d]
- How a human 'jumping gene' targets structured DNA to reshape the genome [101d]
- Optical system achieves terabit-per-second capacity and integrates quantum cryptography for long-term security [101d]
- Visualizing ancient proteins: New staining technique reliably detects collagen in fossils [101d]
- How a nutrient spark turned Earth into an oxygen world [101d]
- Retired croplands offer hope for carbon storage [101d]
- Five different carbon-based compounds discovered in the Large Magellanic Cloud [101d]
- Constraints on solar power satellites are more ground-based than space-based, says study [101d]
- Nickel nanowires in plasma-treated nanotubes boost hydrogen production from urea [101d]
- Natural Japanese and Taiwanese hinoki cypresses genetically differentiated 1 million years ago, analysis reveals [101d]
- Insights into malaria parasite's sodium pump structure could reshape treatment [101d]
- The Southern Ocean may be building up a massive burp [101d]
- Do dogs behave differently during an owner's pregnancy? Many dog owners think so [101d]
- Study indicates forest regeneration provides climate benefits, but won't offset fossil fuels [101d]
- Q&A: Racing against time—the challenge of preserving languages before they vanish [101d]
- New hope for cats with eye infections: Common cold sore cream is safe and effective for feline use [101d]
- Sodium-ion battery breakthrough could power greener energy—and even make seawater drinkable [101d]
- Enzyme-based system produces versatile active ingredients for drug discovery and testing [101d]
- No tricks, only treats: Bats glow under ultraviolet light [101d]
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