The Brutalist Report - science
- Why shoppers buy fast fashion even if they disagree with it [98d]
- Violence against women and girls: 4 key takeaways from a strategy that aims to change society [98d]
- Super Mario Bros. help fight burnout: Study links classic games to boosted happiness [98d]
- Pimple patches have hidden our blemishes for hundreds of years—historian explains [98d]
- Can camera traps improve conservation outcomes? [98d]
- The 'pawprint economy' is booming—and it offers huge opportunities for tourism [98d]
- A dance of galaxies: JWST captures interacting dwarf galaxies [98d]
- Boosting workplace opportunities for vets [98d]
- Getting support for opening the 'Pandora's box' of DNA testing [98d]
- Halfway through Florida's bear hunt, state officials won't say how many bears are dead [98d]
- Want to read more in 2026? Here's how to revive your love of books [98d]
- Vast freshwater reserves found beneath salinity-stressed coastal Bangladesh [98d]
- From stadium to the wild: Sports clubs as new champions of biodiversity [98d]
- Medieval peasants probably enjoyed their holiday festivities more than you do [98d]
- Stripe patterns in blood cells offer new clues for diagnosing disorders and understanding natural designs [98d]
- New microfluidics technology enables highly uniform DNA condensate formation [98d]
- Database integrates deep-sea multi-omics data to study adaptation in extreme environments [98d]
- What makes goal-setting apps motivate—or backfire? [98d]
- NAC protein complex slows early synthesis to optimize cellular protein production [98d]
- How chirality goes from the molecular level to the cellular one [98d]
- Giant clams thrive with Indigenous management in American Sāmoa [98d]
- Microbial glues go from foe to friend with a simple chemical tweak [98d]
- The stealthy, persistent hazard of thirdhand smoke [98d]
- Lily-like plants reveal centromere type evolution paths [98d]
- Structural findings reveal how distinct GPCR ligands create different levels of activation [98d]
- Predictive 'mismatch' leads to novel carbon capture method [98d]
- New technique lights up where drugs go in the body, cell by cell [98d]
- Smile and the world will trust you: How mimicry shapes first impressions [98d]
- Atmospheric rivers explained: What to know about the weather phenomenon [98d]
- How does Santa do it all? Quantum physics, that's how, says scientist [98d]
- Male bees' food begging behavior traced to a single genetic factor [98d]
- New species of beetle named in honor of Gerald Durrell [98d]
- More eyes on the skies can help planes reduce climate-warming contrails [98d]
- What contributed to the success of termites? Their genomes provide the answer [98d]
- Fishing fleet tracking can reveal shifts in marine ecosystems [98d]
- Supermassive black holes show selective feeding habits during galaxy mergers [98d]
- Fossil-fuel propaganda is stalling climate action; here's what we can do about it [98d]
- Tracing the quick synthesis of an industrially important catalyst [98d]
- The way our cells respond to estrogen depends on how DNA is 'supercoiled' [98d]
- Reversible spin splitting effect achieved in altermagnetic RuO₂ thin films [98d]
- Engineering the first reusable launchpads on the moon [98d]
- Providing AI training leads to more critical and ethical use by university students [98d]
- Working in groups can help Republicans and Democrats agree on controversial content moderation online [98d]
- How soil and human antibiotic resistance are connected [98d]
- Scientists chart over 140,000 DNA loops to map human chromosomes in the nucleus [98d]
- Anything-goes 'anyons' may be at the root of surprising quantum experiments [98d]
- Leaves' pores explain longstanding mystery of uneven tree growth in a carbon-enriched world [98d]
- A third path to explain consciousness: Biological computationalism [98d]
- Two ancient human species came out of Africa together, not one, suggests new study [98d]
- How greener bus stops can help people beat the heat [98d]
- An ecosystem never forgets: Extreme heat and drought responses linked to hydrological memory [98d]
- Hubble glimpses galactic gas making getaway [98d]
- The dual impact of stellar bars on star formation in galaxy pairs [98d]
- The simulation hypothesis: Mathematical framework redefines what it means for one universe to simulate another [98d]
- Whale, dolphin strandings show widespread disease, trauma [98d]
- Ant smuggling case highlights legal inconsistencies [98d]
- Nanoplastics have diet-dependent impacts on digestive system health, study finds [98d]
- Kolmogorov-Arnold networks bridge AI and scientific discovery by increasing interpretability [98d]
- Capturing the moment a cell shuts the door on free radicals [98d]
- Q&A: The science of snowflakes—how hexagonal symmetry and environmental changes create endless designs [98d]
- Cells reveal 'survival of the fittest' through ribosome competition [98d]
- East Antarctic Ice Sheet's history tells a relevant story for today and beyond [98d]
- I study rat nests—here's why rodents make great archivists [98d]
- Great apes are humans' closest relatives, but many are endangered by illegal trading [98d]
- Climate misinformation is becoming a national security threat. Canada isn't ready for it [98d]
- How shipwrecks become 'islands of life' in barren seas [98d]
- How climate campaigns can cut through ad fatigue [98d]
- ALMA observations reveal multiscale fragmentation in massive star formation [98d]
- Disaster after disaster: Do we have enough raw materials to 'build back better?' [98d]
- The sound of droplets striking water: How cowbirds control two sound sources in the syrinx to create 'liquid notes' [98d]
- Who was Amelia Frank? The life of a forgotten physicist [98d]
- Warming may make tropical cyclone 'seeds' riskier for Africa [98d]
- Deepest gas hydrate cold seep ever discovered in the Arctic at 3,640 m depth [98d]
- Decades-long quest leads to first scholarly accurate fossil replica of 'dinosaur-killer' croc [98d]
- AI uncovers double-strangeness: A new double-Lambda hypernucleus [98d]
- Five new planets and the battle for their atmospheres [98d]
- Federal Earned Income Tax Credit has unexpected result, researchers say—it decreases domestic violence [98d]
- NASA's wideband technology demo proves space missions are free to roam [98d]
- The way we manage fires needs to shift from 'siloed' to 'connected,' experts argue [98d]
- Wind-sculpted landscapes: Investigating the Martian megaripple 'Hazyview' [98d]
- Negotiation failure on UN environmental assessment highlights need for reform [98d]
- Urban areas insurance feasibility and structure explored in new report [98d]
- Toddlers with facial tattoos: How Christianity expanded body art in Nile Valley civilizations [98d]
- Stardust study resets how life's atoms spread through space [98d]
- Social media users in the Central Valley are freaking out about unusual fog, and what might be in it [98d]
- Simulations explore Neanderthal and modern human encounters in ancient Europe [98d]
- PFAS concentrations can double with every step up the food chain [98d]
- AI mimics human-like intuition to explore and analyze chemical reactions [98d]
- Study shows the 2008 recession caused people to identify with a lower class [98d]
- How healthy are Brazil nuts? New study elucidates trace elements in the seeds [98d]
- Report calls on the UK banking industry to consider interventions that 'design out' economic abuse [98d]
- How spatial scale shapes plant invasions [98d]
- Some mammals can hit pause on a pregnancy—understanding how that happens could help us treat cancer [98d]
- Secret lives of cats could hold clues for wildcat return in Wales [98d]
- Mixing incentives and penalties found key to cutting carbon emissions long term [98d]
- Earthquake swarm continues to rattle Northern California city, seismologists say [98d]
- Ancient sea anemone sheds light on animal cell type evolution [99d]
- Artificial metabolism turns waste CO₂ into useful chemicals [99d]
- CO2 soon to be buried under North Sea oil platform [99d]
- Japan's new flagship H3 rocket fails to put geolocation satellite into orbit [99d]
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