The Brutalist Report - science
- New report highlights positive impact of rewilding project on people and nature [46d]
- How are humans changing the Arctic Ocean? [46d]
- Hustle, muscle and grift: How the manosphere has grown into a money-making machine [46d]
- From FIFA to the LA Clippers, carbon offset scandals are exposing the gap between promises and reality [46d]
- Media hype shapes rise and fall of the 'girlboss' entrepreneur narrative [46d]
- Climate change puts riverbed microbes under constant stress, study finds [46d]
- How everyday repairs sustain autonomy in a Japanese squat [46d]
- The people building sustainability—without a clearly defined role [46d]
- Cracks in the Earth: Major gully erosion poses humanitarian crisis threats [46d]
- How building with Lego can help teens talk about life's big questions [46d]
- Can smart greenhouses bring back food production in cities? [46d]
- School feeding programs lead to modest but meaningful results, according to review [46d]
- Eco-friendly, photo-switchable smart adhesives use biomass-derived materials [46d]
- NOAA's denial of endangered status for salmon sparks talk of legal challenge [46d]
- Study: Virtual reality tours make real difference in home sales [46d]
- Simulations reveal protein 'dynamin' constricts cell membranes by loosening its grip [46d]
- Research examines dance as protest in Iran [46d]
- In Palestinian and Israeli families, exposure to ethnic-political violence boosted harsh parenting [46d]
- Rule-breaking rampant in whale shark tourism hub [46d]
- Roman urbanism was bad for health, new study confirms [46d]
- Reddit field experiment examines what distinguishes lurkers from power users [46d]
- Mitochondrial enzyme's atomic-level structure reveals how it processes RNA [46d]
- A new reference brain could make the clonal raider ant a go-to model species for neuroscience [46d]
- 'Rage bait' is the Oxford Word of the Year, showing how social media is manufacturing anger [46d]
- Q&A: Food waste in South Africa is dumped in landfills—exploring healthier and more sustainable options [46d]
- The JWST just identified a supernova from only 730 million years after the Big Bang [46d]
- Q&A: Why self-appraisals may not be best way to judge job performance [46d]
- Prairie strips can rapidly improve soil health [46d]
- Spending less can deliver more climate-friendly nutrition [46d]
- Turning everyday filter paper into a miniature microfluidic platform with DLP 3D printing [46d]
- Why socially responsible investing can backfire [46d]
- AI pinpoints aspens and standing dead trees in forests using aerial imagery [46d]
- Safe CO₂ storage in the Earth only possible with robust modeling [46d]
- New circoviruses discovered in pilot whales and orcas from the North Atlantic [46d]
- Theoretical results could lead to faster, more secure quantum technology [46d]
- Lunar soil analyses reveal how space weathering shapes the moon's ultraviolet reflectance [46d]
- Descriptions of mollusks in the Global South are still, for the most part, the result of 'parachute science' [46d]
- Polarized light boosts accuracy of wearable health sensors for all skin tones [46d]
- Slow changes in radio scintillation can nudge pulsar timing by billionths of a second [46d]
- Einstein's theory comes wrapped up with a bow: Astronomers spot star 'wobbling' around black hole [46d]
- New study reveals Industrial Revolution's uneven health impacts across England [46d]
- Investor attention on individual stocks can predict marketwide performance [46d]
- A new framework addresses fair distribution of emissions [46d]
- Earliest botanical art hints at prehistoric mathematical thinking [46d]
- Rethinking climate migration to include a third framework of 'tethered resilience' [46d]
- Using soccer balls to refine computational fluid dynamics research methods [46d]
- Viruses found in carbon-storing wetlands play an active role in shaping ecosystem health [46d]
- The race to mine the Moon is on, and it urgently needs some clear international rules [46d]
- Magnetic ordering induces Jahn-Teller effect in spinel-type compounds [46d]
- More yield through heterosis: Researchers decode gene interaction behind hybrid vigor [46d]
- Wildfire smoke lofted into atmosphere could affect Earth's climate [47d]
- Biobanking opens new windows into human evolution [47d]
- The Hjortspring boat: Partial fingerprint in ancient tar offers rare glimpse into seafaring past [47d]
- How emotions spread online following celebrity suicide news [47d]
- Innovation scouts who work across multiple divisions struggle to launch products successfully [47d]
- New book examines how educational reforms have attempted to fix past problems instead of inventing the future [47d]
- How social media shapes tolerance and echo chambers [47d]
- Used cooking oil yields super strong glue and recyclable plastics [47d]
- Study links vanishing of specific heats at absolute zero with principle of entropy increase [47d]
- Cats' purrs reveal who's who better than their meows [47d]
- The Nancy Grace Roman Telescope is complete [47d]
- Iberian peninsula is rotating clockwise, according to new geodynamic data [47d]
- Cosmic trip could help bacteria keep future space missions safe from radiation [47d]
- 'Mindful gifting' could be the kindest thing you do for yourself and others this Christmas [47d]
- Ancient humans mastered fire-making 400,000 years ago, study shows [47d]
- LHC delivers a record number of particle collisions in 2025 [47d]
- How local lobstermen could help save our coastal habitats [47d]
- Analysis of Diplodocus dinosaur scales reveals possible speckled color patterning [47d]
- A pioneering study on the feasibility of asteroid mining [47d]
- Warped galaxies linked to satellite patterns and cosmic web alignment [47d]
- Searchable Bronze Age site database could help answer key questions about ancient Anatolia [47d]
- ALICE solves mystery of light-nuclei survival [47d]
- Hidden gatekeeper of cell death reveals new layer of control [47d]
- Detecting antibiotic resistance more reliably: AI tool reduces false positives [47d]
- Honeybees crowd out bumblebees—even on flower-rich heathlands [47d]
- Simulation may illuminate safer cannabinoid drugs [47d]
- Tropical cyclones and the carbon cycle: New insights from a model simulation [47d]
- The rhythm of swarms: Tunable particles synchronize movement like living organisms [47d]
- Direct observation reveals 'two-in-one' roles of plasma turbulence [47d]
- New iron telluride thin film achieves superconductivity for quantum computer chips [47d]
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