The Brutalist Report - science
- Bio-inspired nanochannels provide experimental evidence for uncovering brain memory mechanisms [48d]
- Expert warns venture capital's push for 'hypergrowth' puts tenants at risk [48d]
- Global terrestrial biodiversity hotspots are in 'land use debt,' study finds [48d]
- Why does mint make water taste so cold? A scientist explains [48d]
- Combining ecological restoration with climate-resilient agriculture to tackle desertification [48d]
- As Australia bakes through an extreme heat wave, even insects aren't immune to its impact [48d]
- UK consumers may be ready to swap salmon for sprats and sardines [48d]
- Zombie fungi and 'bloodstained' orchids: Top plant and fungal species named new to science in 2025 [48d]
- Dogs' dinners can have greater climate impact than those of their owners [48d]
- Families reveal harsh reality of prison visits [49d]
- Solar physicists discover long-hidden source of gamma rays unleashed by flares [49d]
- THz spectroscopy system bypasses long-standing tradeoff between spectral and spatial resolution [49d]
- Warming winters and storm-driven dispersal facilitate northward mangrove expansion along the US Atlantic coast [49d]
- The mechanical ratchet: A new mechanism of cell division [49d]
- Plasma rings around M dwarf stars offer new clues to planetary habitability [49d]
- New tool narrows the search for ideal metal organic frameworks [49d]
- AI tool can take a cattle's temperature with only a photo [49d]
- Optics research uses dim light to produce bright LEDs [49d]
- Engineers create water-saving sand layer to improve plant resilience during drought [49d]
- Snow's compressibility acts as avalanche crumple zone [49d]
- Overlooked molecule points to new treatments for drug-resistant fungal infections [49d]
- Creating psychedelic-like molecules by shining light on life's basic building blocks [49d]
- Synchronizing ultrashort X-ray pulses for attosecond precision [49d]
- Chasing ghost plumes: How underwater drones captured the secret 48-hour countdown to algal blooms [49d]
- Pocketbook realities reshape Americans' commitment to democratic ideals [49d]
- Forests under climate stress: Why trees are growing less despite an early start [49d]
- Swinging abyss: Oxygen isotope analysis shows less dynamic Antarctic ice sheet in Oligocene period [49d]
- Unearthing experimental materials data buried in scientific papers using LLMs [49d]
- AI boosts bird sound identification accuracy [49d]
- Image: Lightning from above [49d]
- Lunar spacecraft exhaust could obscure clues to origins of life [49d]
- Vera C. Rubin Observatory spots record-breaking asteroid in pre-survey observations [49d]
- Flexible material mimics octopus skin with nanoscale color and texture transformations [49d]
- Sentinel-1's decade of essential data over shifting ice sheets [49d]
- North Pacific winter storm tracks shifting poleward much faster than predicted [49d]
- Ribosomal engineering creates 'super-probiotic' bacteria with enhanced immune activation [49d]
- How rice viruses manipulate plant defenses to protect insect vectors [49d]
- Urban atmosphere acts as primary reservoir of microplastics, researchers find [49d]
- Earth's early sponges were soft: Scientists close fossil record gap [49d]
- Understanding the role of linear ubiquitination in T-tubule biogenesis [49d]
- 60,000-year-old traces of world's oldest arrow poison reveal early advanced hunting techniques [49d]
- A Namib desert beetle runs to stay cool: How scientists solved the puzzle of this unique and speedy species [49d]
- Snowflake-like emergence phenomenon discovered in metal nanocrystals [49d]
- New evidence for a particle system that 'remembers' its previous quantum states [49d]
- Making the invisible visible: Space particles become observable through handheld invention [49d]
- Simulation model provides accurate assessment of urban spread, residual risks of chemical warfare agents [49d]
- Think society is in decline? Research gives us some reasons to be cheerful [49d]
- What I've learned from studying the wild pigeon [49d]
- Sulfolobus islandicus: Expanding the genetic toolkit for drug delivery and biotechnology applications [49d]
- A case of mistaken identity: Mammoth fossils from Alaska turn out to belong to two ancient whales [49d]
- Sahel farmers do better when they combine innovations rather than using them one by one [49d]
- Measures of academic value overlook African scholars who make a local impact: Study [49d]
- Marine geoscientists link warming with ancient ocean 'salty blob' [49d]
- How facial recognition for bears can help ecologists manage wildlife [49d]
- Risks young chimps take as they swing through the trees underscore role of protective parenting in humans [49d]
- Researchers develop electricity-free chlorine production from brines [49d]
- Sandblasting on Mars: Camera reveals how prevailing winds shape elongated landforms in volcanic zone [49d]
- Scientists use string theory to crack the code of natural networks [49d]
- Inside the massive radio search of our newest interstellar guest [49d]
- Can recycling urine help combat the climate crisis? [49d]
- Tackling conspiracy theories requires tactics as varied as the theories themselves [49d]
- Going further with fusion, together [49d]
- Long day at work? Go ahead and watch some TV, research suggests [49d]
- US defense attorneys' view on autism highlights challenges faced by neurodiverse clients [49d]
- Crime in Newark concentrated around corner stores [49d]
- Supernova remnant video from NASA's Chandra is decades in making [49d]
- Antiferromagnetic metal exhibits diode-like behavior without external magnetic field [49d]
- Regenerative farmers view nature as a meaningful partner in professional decision-making [49d]
- Small-scale rainforest clearing drives majority of carbon loss, study finds [49d]
- The Milky Way's black hole is hiding an explosive past, evidence suggests [49d]
- German emissions cuts slow, North Sea has warmest year on record [49d]
- France halts imports of food with traces of banned pesticides [49d]
- Stars that die off the beaten path [49d]
- Small chimps, big risks: What chimps show us about our own behavior [49d]
- CRISPR discovery could lead to single diagnostic test for COVID, flu, RSV [49d]
- Molecular switch reveals transition between single-celled and multicellular forms [49d]
- Early hominins from Morocco reveal an African lineage near the root of Homo sapiens [49d]
- Four baby planets show how super-Earths and sub-Neptunes form [49d]
- A fresh start feels powerful—until motivation fades. Here's how to set work goals that stick [49d]
- Where will the next megafire break out? Climate change is making it tougher to predict [49d]
- Cyclones get names but deadly heat waves don't. Should Australia personalize severe weather? [49d]
- Yes, forest trees die of old age. But the warming climate is killing them faster [49d]
- A red moon, a blue moon, a supermoon and more: Your guide to the southern sky in 2026 [49d]
- New book highlights human toll of the Kenyan property boom [49d]
- Why meritocracy is hard to achieve [49d]
- Dark matter and neutrinos may interact, challenging standard model of the universe [49d]
- Economics has lost the narrative thread, says leading expert [49d]
- You've heard of climate change. What is the climate debt doom loop? [49d]
- Flood literacy gaps persist as nature-based solutions prove effective against increasing water events [49d]
- Direct flights drive multinational firm growth in globally connected cities [49d]
- How political influence shapes agricultural expansion in the Amazon [49d]
- Smartphone use cuts into school hours, with social media leading the way [49d]
- Ushikuvirus: Newly discovered giant virus may offer clues to the origin of life [49d]
- How is drought in New England affecting water levels and the environment? [49d]
- Nature-inspired computers are shockingly good at math [49d]
- Human-made materials could make up as much as half of some Scottish beaches [49d]
- Inflatable fabric robotic arm picks apples [49d]
- Oil residues can travel over 5,000 miles on ocean debris, study finds [49d]
- How a parasite 'gave up sex' to find more hosts—and why its victory won't last [49d]
- Ammonites survived asteroid impact that killed off dinosaurs, new evidence suggests [49d]
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