The Brutalist Report - science
- No new articles in the last 24 hours.
- Global plan outlines steps to monitor and reduce marine litter worldwide [18d]
- First 'Bible map' published 500 years ago still influences how we think about borders, study suggests [18d]
- Q&A: Calcium channel mechanism provides new insights into cellular quality control [18d]
- Students spend more time learning to write on paper than computers—does this need to change? [18d]
- Bisexual individuals experience greater loneliness than homosexuals and heterosexuals, study suggests [18d]
- Caribbean rainfall driven by shifting long-term patterns in the Atlantic high-pressure system, study finds [18d]
- New species of begonia found in Guangxi, China [18d]
- A taste of the sea: Comparing five edible seaweeds [18d]
- Local space weather impacts on technology and safety vary more than expected [18d]
- Dark matter-dark energy interaction shapes cosmic halo spin and alignment, simulations show [18d]
- Electric control of ions and water enables switchable molecular stickiness on surfaces [18d]
- Finding information in the randomness of living matter [18d]
- Long-term field data reveal warming cuts temperate forest NO and N₂O emissions by altering soil moisture [18d]
- Quasi-periodic oscillations detected in unusual multi-trigger gamma-ray burst [18d]
- Rare high-resolution observations of a flare-prolific solar active region [18d]
- Tiny lead fragments in hunted meat exceed safe levels, study reveals [18d]
- Can quantum computers help researchers learn about the inside of a neutron star? [18d]
- Eight ways to resist spending too much on Black Friday bargains [18d]
- The surprising world of animal penises and what they reveal about humans [18d]
- Advanced tracking uncovers flapper skate hotspots on Scotland's deep seabed [18d]
- Studies show how the giant statues on Rapa Nui were made and moved—and what caused the island's deforestation [18d]
- 'Stick and glue' method enables more precise biomolecule tracking in cells [18d]
- Domestic cats came from North Africa to Europe only 2,000 years ago, DNA evidence suggests [18d]
- When computers took over the factory floor: Economist traces how workers adapted, what it means for AI's future [18d]
- Death toll from floods and landslides on Indonesia's Sumatra island rises to 164 [18d]
- Astronomers unveil 400 sibling star clusters in the Milky Way [18d]
- Common gut bacteria identified as cause of pig ear necrosis [18d]
- The largest ice desert has the fewest ice nuclei worldwide [18d]
- Latent antimicrobial resistance is widespread across the world, research discovers [18d]
- Early adversity leads to higher aggression and fearfulness in adult canines, study says [18d]
- Physicists generate hybrid spin-sound waves, expanding options for 6G implementation [18d]
- Nanostructured coatings physically puncture bacteria to prevent biofilm formation [18d]
- An unusually 'sticky' RNA class that keep cells organized: Researchers discover smOOPs [18d]
- Rare stone tool cache found in Australian outback tells story of trade and ingenuity [18d]
- Research calls for 'sportswashing' rethink amid FIFA Peace Prize rumors [18d]
- Researchers identify key molecular mechanism in cell communication [18d]
- Curiosity and focus found to set 'genius' dogs apart in object learning [18d]
- Incorrect reporting of Australian Bureau of Statistics data found leading to false claims of mass migration problem [18d]
- Stars defy black hole by showing stable orbits around Sagittarius A* [18d]
- Indian IT professionals bear unseen costs of multinational companies' shift to remote working [18d]
- Archaeologists discover solitary grave from ancient Kingdom of Kerma in remote Bayuda Desert [18d]
- Lake heat waves are more intense, longer-lasting than atmospheric ones, new study reveals [18d]
- Study highlights rise of 'authoritarian peacemaking' and its implications for Ukraine [18d]
- Male skulls at Shimao gate rewrite story of Neolithic human sacrifice [18d]
- New plastics designed to degrade on demand may help address global waste [18d]
- Artificial membranes mimic life-like dynamics through catalytic chemical reactions [18d]
- Radio wave bursts linked to onset of intense auroral storms [18d]
- New universal law predicts how most objects shatter, from dropped bottles to exploding bubbles [18d]
- Bilingual brains switch modes as Czech speakers process English like natives, even when it means making 'native' mistake [18d]
- Nanoscale 'Bragg gratings' on photonic chips suppress noise in laser light [18d]
- How phototherapy could reverse antibiotic resistance [18d]
- Songbird experts put superb fairy-wren danger call on the record [18d]
- Ice age architecture: How mammoth bones reveal human ingenuity [18d]
- Prevention alone will not save us from financial crashes, according to new study [18d]
- Urban bats avoid street lights when commuting between their roosts and foraging grounds [18d]
- Tiny reconfigurable robots can help manage carbon dioxide levels in confined spaces [18d]
- Polymer beads generate electricity for self-charging devices using simple friction [18d]
- Desert microbes drive soil carbon sinks in arid regions, study reveals [18d]
- Google Quantum AI realizes three dynamic surface code implementations [18d]
- Devastating stellar storm seen on red dwarf star [18d]
- Group 13 elements: The lucky number for sustainable redox agents? [18d]
- Trained to serve: Service dogs' roles are expanding to help more people [18d]
- Why refugees in Australia still face barriers to good jobs [18d]
- Quantum sensor based on silicon carbide qubits operates at room temperature [18d]
- New EPA rule gives oil, gas firms more time to fix equipment leaking methane [18d]
- Australia passes landmark law overhauling nature protection [18d]
- Rethinking retail trades: Researchers explore US proposal amid global push for investor welfare [19d]
- Africa's forests have switched from absorbing to emitting carbon, new study finds [19d]
- Russian cosmodrome damaged after joint launch with US [19d]
- Over 70 shark, ray species win new wildlife trade protections [19d]
- CBD supplements may make dogs less aggressive over time [19d]
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