The Brutalist Report - science
- No new articles in the Past 12 Hours.
- A 'ghost' of the Australian bush: Newly discovered marsupial species may already be extinct [151d]
- Model plant study reveals how protein clustering impacts gene regulation and epigenetic silencing [151d]
- Uncovering what makes cells picky (self) eaters: Team maps pathways that determine cellular recycling outputs [151d]
- Previously unknown RNA chaperone guides assembly of key poxvirus protein complex [151d]
- Vintage NASA: See Voyager's 1990 'Solar System Family Portrait' debut [151d]
- Seagrass swap could reshape Chesapeake Bay food web [151d]
- From offshore to onshore: Europe expands carbon storage with nature-inspired tech [151d]
- How to help trigger positive tipping points and speed up climate action [151d]
- 'Ghost sharks' grow forehead teeth to help them have sex, study suggests [151d]
- Polymer ink fine-tunes water flow, boosting ethylene yield and cutting energy costs [151d]
- Extreme weather changes not only how many people migrate, but who does [151d]
- Fast-growing brains may explain how humans—and marmosets—learn to talk [151d]
- Sustainable process breaks down keratin, turning leftover wool and feathers into useful products [151d]
- Alpaca-generated nanobody neutralizes a protein essential for herpes infection [151d]
- Ancient iridescent flat bug preserved in amber may have taken part in pollination [151d]
- Dogs, pigs and humans share ancient brain mechanisms for recognizing vocal sounds [151d]
- Desire in code: Legal perspectives on sex robots and consent [151d]
- Diagnostic system developed for identifying ADHD-suspected dogs [151d]
- Open-source computational tool sheds light on 'wiggly' proteins [151d]
- Shaky cameras can make for sharper shots, new research shows [151d]
- How extreme temperatures alter reptile reproduction [151d]
- Bacteria's hidden Achilles' heel: Sugar-phosphate buildup disrupts cell wall synthesis [151d]
- Most enduring and biggest iceberg breaks apart, with more splintering to come in its death spiral [151d]
- Why we slip on ice: Physicists challenge centuries-old assumptions [151d]
- Engineered E. coli produce biodegradable plastic that outperforms widely used PET [151d]
- POLIZERO: Project shows paths to climate neutrality [151d]
- Provisions from pond water? Researchers leverage biomanufacturing to produce food [151d]
- Giving food waste fermentation a 'jolt' increases chemical production [151d]
- Research findings offer new insight into blood thinners and bone builders [151d]
- Ireland's first satellite EIRSAT-1 completes its mission [151d]
- Forever chemicals are more acidic than we thought, study finds [151d]
- Exploring the secret lives of figs and fig wasps [151d]
- AI model reveals hidden earthquake swarms and faults in Italy's Campi Flegrei [151d]
- New algorithm hushes unwanted noise in LIGO, may lead to more black hole discoveries [151d]
- Ancient plant protein offers new path for broad-spectrum pathogen resistance in crops [151d]
- Current extinction rates haven't reached level of 'mass extinction' just yet, study suggests [151d]
- Making diamonds with electron radiation [151d]
- Most rodents have thumbnails instead of claws: It might help explain how they took over the world [151d]
- Human impact on the ocean will double by 2050, scientists warn [151d]
- Researchers achieve light-induced heterolytic hydrogen dissociation at ambient temperature [151d]
- A twist in spintronics: Chiral magnetic nanohelices control spins at room temperature [151d]
- Magnetic nanoparticles in synthetic cells enable controlled, deep-tissue drug release with reduced side effects [151d]
- Sydney once produced its own food—but urban development has devoured the city's food bowl [151d]
- Microfluidics suggest hydrophilic surfaces retain more oil than hydrophobic ones for groundwater remediation [151d]
- Amazon's Starlink rival lands first major airline deal [151d]
- Spin-state tuning in perovskite boosts high-temperature oxygen evolution reaction [151d]
- Zooming in on Pismis 24, Webb gets glittering glimpse of star birth [151d]
- New report reveals glaring gaps between Australia's future needs and science capabilities [151d]
- Oxygen came late to ocean depths during Paleozoic, isotope analysis reveals [151d]
- Hundreds of abundant freshwater microbes finally cultivated for laboratory study [151d]
- The cosmic giant challenging our understanding of galaxy formation in the early universe [151d]
- Iron-laden fluids drive abiotic organic synthesis in dolomitic marble, offering insight into origin of early life [151d]
- You can be exposed to PFAS through food, water, even swimming in lakes [151d]
- Observation-informed deep learning cuts ENSO projection uncertainty [151d]
- Iberian harvester ant queens are cloning different species to produce hybrid workers [151d]
- What I've learned from photographing (almost) every British wildflower [151d]
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