The Brutalist Report - science
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- Voters shrug off scandals, paying a price in lost trust [95d]
- Why do South African teachers still threaten children with a beating? A psychologist explains [95d]
- How I'm helping rice farmers in India harness the power of fungi in soil [95d]
- Judge finds Alaska's bid to reauthorize wolf-shooting program on Kenai Peninsula is unconstitutional [95d]
- With thousands of feral horses gone, Kosciuszko's fragile ecosystems are slowly recovering [95d]
- LA fires: Chemicals from the smoke lingered inside homes long after the wildfires were out. Studies tracked the harm [95d]
- Gene editing in Indonesia: Can new biotechnology solve old agricultural problems? [95d]
- Researchers develop non-destructive spectrometry technique for analyzing fragile archaeological ivory [95d]
- From Kathmandu to Casablanca, a generation under surveillance is rising up [95d]
- Second spider-parasitic mite species described in Brazil [95d]
- Butterflies, snakes and flowers: In rugged Baja canyons, scientists unlock an unsung region's biodiversity [95d]
- Why can't we admit to not enjoying a bad vacation? [95d]
- Feeling stuck at work as the New Year begins? It may be a sign of professional growth [95d]
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- Europe takes a bold step toward systems-based chemical risk assessment [95d]
- Infrastructure design is the hidden architecture of disaster risk [95d]
- Drones with standard cameras reveal hidden forest layers using AI technology [95d]
- Versatile mechanophore detects structural damage without false alarms from heat or UV [95d]
- Historic buildings contribute to urban scenicness as much as trees and water, says study [95d]
- Tiny fluorescent core-shell silica nanoparticles supercharge cancer immunotherapy [95d]
- Thin ice may have protected lake water on frozen Mars [95d]
- Plant sex life is more complicated than you probably imagine [95d]
- Reading the sky: How Irish weather lore preserved a deep understanding of the natural world [95d]
- Climate messaging sways minds, not wallets, regardless of political party [95d]
- New species of bush tomato with visible nectar glands discovered in the Australian outback [95d]
- Betelgeuse's elusive companion star: Siwarha's 'wake' detected [95d]
- Microbes may hold the key to brain evolution [95d]
- Worms as particle sweepers: How simple movement, not intelligence, drives environmental order [95d]
- Discoveries rewrite how some minerals form and dissolve [95d]
- Survey across 153 countries links the effects of LGBT-phobia and economic insecurity [95d]
- Active solar region observed for record 94 days [95d]
- Hidden molecular switch controls taste, metabolism and gut function [95d]
- Hubble examines Cloud-9, first of new type of object [95d]
- How storm surges could impact coastal workplaces [95d]
- Ancient Antarctica reveals a 'one–two punch' behind ice sheet collapse [95d]
- Research probes rage bait: Why digital anger echoes louder [95d]
- Gender stereotypes reflect the division of labor between women and men across nations [95d]
- Biological pumps: How zooplankton are transporting microplastics to the ocean depths [95d]
- Fungus 'rewires' maize plants, causing tumor-like growths by hijacking root formation process [95d]
- Understanding fuel cell catalysts: Study reveals shifting rate-limiting steps [95d]
- High-throughput platform enables aptamer discovery and kinetic profiling [95d]
- Astronomers reveal hidden lives of the early universe's ultramassive galaxies [95d]
- Metal–metal bonded molecule achieves stable spin qubit state, opening path toward quantum computing materials [95d]
- Microalgae could fuel Hawaiʻi's renewable future [95d]
- Eye-opening research: Greenland sharks maintain vision for centuries through DNA repair mechanism [95d]
- Dyslexic students have the right to read, and in Canada, Manitoba has joined other provinces to address it [95d]
- From sun safety to sex appeal: What sunscreen ads reveal about beauty ideals and power [95d]
- AI agents are reshaping sales at a growing pace [95d]
- Greenland's Prudhoe Dome ice cap was completely gone only 7,000 years ago, study finds [95d]
- EPA says it will propose drinking water limit for perchlorate, but only because court ordered it [95d]
- Roots of medieval migration into England uncovered in new study [95d]
- Three ways to tackle injustice without being a full-time activist [95d]
- The US used to be really dirty: Environmental cleanup laws have made a huge difference [95d]
- Vegetation might exacerbate urban heat island effect in very dry cities [95d]
- How museums can help rebuild trust in a divided America [95d]
- Ultramassive black holes and their galaxies: A matter of scale [95d]
- How a move to the shallows 300,000 years ago drove a phytoplankton bloom [95d]
- Will 2026 be the year when coral reefs pass their tipping point? [95d]
- As the Milan Winter Olympics approach, what are the environmental expectations? [95d]
- XRISM gives sharpest-ever glimpse at growth of a rapidly-spinning black hole [95d]
- Why brides are still reluctant to choose secondhand wedding dresses [95d]
- Psychological traits that may fuel conspiracy theorist mindset identified [95d]
- AI approach takes optical system design from months to milliseconds [95d]
- The ambitious plan to spot habitable moons around giant planets [95d]
- Warmer world weakens butterfly defenses against parasite infections—which have tripled since 2002 [95d]
- Human connection key to a successful holiday rental [96d]
- Guidelines developed for diagnosing, monitoring canine cognitive decline [96d]
- Electron beams guide atomic-scale structural transformations in crystals [96d]
- Scientists sound alarm on erosion of long-term environmental data [96d]
- Long-term study reveals predictable patterns in wolf–human conflict across Türkiye [96d]
- Fungal allies: Unsung heroes of seedling survival in subtropical forests [96d]
- A neighboring vista of stellar birth [96d]
- 'Atmospheric inversion' may help predict when a humid heat wave will break [96d]
- Earliest, hottest galaxy cluster gas on record challenges cosmological models [96d]
- Inhalable nanotherapy against advanced melanoma aims for one-two punch [96d]
- Smart polymers harden on demand with light or gentle heat activation [96d]
- Why astronomy needs a giant in the Canary Islands [96d]
- Sediments of the Ahr river show recurring high-magnitude flood events [96d]
- Fault-tolerant quantum computing: Novel protocol efficiently reduces resource cost [96d]
- Rapid on-site detection of food fraud [96d]
- New year's resolutions? Add social fitness to the list [96d]
- Hotter weather thickens the blood of wild mammals: We traced this in African striped mice [96d]
- Can office culture survive the work-from-home revolution? Yes, but you can't force the fun [96d]
- Just joined a dating app? Here's how to look after yourself and handle rejection [96d]
- Why you're wise on Tuesday and foolish on Sunday: Practicing wisdom in uncertain times [96d]
- More than 250,000 Australians don't have access to a vet [96d]
- What a decade of research reveals about institutions and social entrepreneurship [96d]
- Even after wildfires are extinguished, smoke damage may continue to pose risks to residents [96d]
- Salmonella rewires mitochondrial metabolite pipeline to disarm oxidative defenses [96d]
- Oceans struggle to absorb Earth's carbon dioxide as microplastics invade their waters [96d]
- Los Angeles fires 12 months on: What does research tell us? [96d]
- Solar flares and stellar flares hit differently [96d]
- Making sense of quantum gravity in five dimensions [96d]
- $40 million campaign launched to save pristine NC game lands from development [96d]
- Nearly every corn seed planted in Colorado is covered in insecticide: Lawmakers may restrict the chemical [96d]
- How artificial intelligence became real estate's new secret weapon [96d]
- Popular dog treats recalled in 7 states over salmonella risk [96d]
- Mountain lion attacks on pets and cattle rattle a small Central California town [96d]
- Geometry shapes life: Embryo curvature acts as instruction manual for coordinated cell division [96d]
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