The Brutalist Report - science
- No new articles in the Past 12 Hours.
- Early testing of schoolchildren has absolutely zero effect, researchers say [38d]
- 'This year nearly broke me as a scientist': US researchers reflect on how 2025's science cuts have changed their lives [38d]
- To feel lonely is to be human: Here's how to handle it at Christmas [38d]
- How much does it cost to end rough sleeping? An Australian-first study may have just found out [38d]
- Many shoppers take a strange comfort of buying now and paying later—but it can come with a sting after Christmas [38d]
- Universities' work towards Indigenous identity policies signals difficult conversations [38d]
- 'The river will not wait for us': Strict timeline set for Colorado River deal [38d]
- Bromeliads promote plant diversity in the forest by enriching the soil with nutrients [38d]
- How Europe's new carbon tax on imported goods will change global trade—and our shopping habits [38d]
- Scientists at the American Museum of Natural History discovered more than 70 new species in 2025 [38d]
- Q&A: New method measures how quickly heat spreads through mountain permafrost [38d]
- Roman soldiers defending Hadrian's Wall were infected by parasites, study finds [38d]
- Fort Lauderdale wants to help residents build 'living' seawalls [38d]
- Drone sampling of whale breath reveals first evidence of potentially deadly virus in Arctic [38d]
- Food companies' reports overlook key environmental harms beyond climate impact [38d]
- Citizens have greater trust in parliaments with higher female representation, new research finds [38d]
- A 400-million-year-old fossil is revealing how plants grew into giants [38d]
- Research reinvents MXene synthesis at a fraction of the cost [38d]
- A short-lived kinase state that's essential for normal cell migration and T-cell function [38d]
- 'AI advisor' helps self-driving labs share control in creation of next-generation materials [38d]
- Private donors pledge $1 billion for world's largest particle accelerator [38d]
- Newly discovered microbes challenge assumptions about methane production in the environment [38d]
- Hybrid excitons: Combining the best of both worlds [38d]
- Life on lava: How microbes colonize new habitats [38d]
- Survey of researchers shows active AI adoption for core scientific tasks [38d]
- Bazinga! Physicists crack a 'Big Bang Theory' problem that could help explain dark matter [38d]
- Hidden viruses: Amoebae as a water safety 'Trojan horse' [38d]
- Improved tracer labeling expands PET imaging possibilities [38d]
- SPHEREx telescope completes first full-sky infrared map in 102 colors [38d]
- Protected areas mitigate mammal behavioral disturbances, study finds [38d]
- Induced pluripotent stem cells: From dish to freezer and back [38d]
- Ants may hold solution to human superbug, researchers discover [38d]
- Researchers reveal how climate change is shaping decisions to move—or stay put [38d]
- Refugees living outside camps make significant gains in self-reliance [38d]
- Bacterium hijacks fruit ripening program in citrus plants to steal sugars, research reveals [38d]
- An integrated framework to better assess air pollution health risks [38d]
- Are talented youth nurtured the wrong way? Top performers develop differently than assumed, says study [38d]
- Christians and Zoroastrians coexisted peacefully in 5th-century Iraq, archaeologists suggest [38d]
- Catch or release: Angler characteristics and location influence which fish make it back into the water [38d]
- International report reveals atmospheric impact of Hunga eruption [38d]
- Identical micro-animals live in two isolated deep-sea environments. How is that possible? [38d]
- Vitamin Sea: How tiny ocean lifeforms shape nutrition [38d]
- Physicists bring unruly molecules to the quantum party [38d]
- 'Molecular microscope' reveals greener path to ammonia [38d]
- Hidden clay intensified 2011 Japan megaquake, study confirms [38d]
- Hubble captures rare collision in nearby planetary system [38d]
- Organic materials conduct ions in solids as easily as in liquids thanks to flexible sidechains [38d]
- Rare earth elements: Of peptides and the origins of life [38d]
- Key proteins reveal how evolution of locomotion shapes bone remodeling processes [38d]
- Understanding climate change in America: Skepticism, dogmatism and personal experience [38d]
- Call your pop-pop: Unlocking conversations between generations [38d]
- Common virus 'rewires' intracellular mechanisms to promote infection [38d]
- Webb uncovers Milky Way's turbulent youth through galactic twins [38d]
- How misreading Google Trends is fueling Bondi attack conspiracy theories [38d]
- Flat Fermi surface in altermagnets enables quantum limit spin currents [38d]
- There's little evidence tech is much help stopping school shootings [38d]
- With wolves absent from most of eastern North America, can coyotes replace them? [38d]
- Resolve to stop punching the clock: Why you might be able to change when and how long you work [38d]
- 'Speed scanner' can test thousands of plant gene switches at once [38d]
- Comet 3I/ATLAS: Europa Clipper captures rare ultraviolet view [38d]
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