The Brutalist Report - science
- How travel and dating apps are changing relationship rules for queer men [1d]
- Minnesota is falling short on its climate goals, new state data shows [1d]
- 1,100 dead or sick geese in NJ spark bird flu warning, prompt lake's closure [1d]
- Pushing the right buttons: Fern guides its embryo's sense of up and down [1d]
- In Tampa, storm-weary residents detail the costs of extreme weather [1d]
- Linguist explains how AI makes fake news more credible [1d]
- Australia's happiness crisis could cost us our global mojo [1d]
- Endangered Kenyan antelopes rescued after being stranded at Palm Beach airport [1d]
- A rethink is needed on zero-tolerance school behavior policies [1d]
- The term 'resilience' becoming a burden for women in agriculture, study shows [1d]
- Aging hens may lay fewer eggs as gut health declines, study finds [1d]
- What is a 'seesaw protein' that switches functions by changing shape? [1d]
- How do clouds form in Antarctica? The first flight-based aerosol measurements in 20 years [1d]
- Supercomputer simulations reveal rotation drives chemical mixing in red giant stars [1d]
- Endangered marine life is being caught in fishing nets, but it doesn't need to be [1d]
- Study finds household-level aid can undermine pastoralists' collective resilience [1d]
- SpaceX rocket left behind a plume of chemical pollution as it burnt up in the atmosphere [1d]
- A survival strategy inside stressed cells: Ribosomes in pairs [1d]
- DNA analysis illuminates the lives of East Marshall Street Well individuals [1d]
- Chemists synthesize first stable copper metallocene complex, closing a 70-year gap [1d]
- Citizen science: Map the Earth's magnetic shield with the Space Umbrella Project [1d]
- Evidence points to early goat and sheep dairy consumption in Neolithic Iran [1d]
- The bouba-kiki effect: Baby chicks match sounds to shapes just like humans [1d]
- From local action to global impact: New framework presented for advancing sustainable development [1d]
- 3D method can accurately measure gravity in wide binary stars, as demonstrated by pilot study [1d]
- REGALADE: The most extensive catalog of galaxies for modern astronomy [1d]
- How choices made by crowds in a train station are guided by strangers [1d]
- Impact-formed glass provides evidence of cosmic collision in Brazil about 6 million years ago [1d]
- Small but mighty microplate reader could transform NASA research [1d]
- New insights into how bacteria control DNA synthesis open the door to next generation antimicrobials [1d]
- Living tissues are shaped by self-propelled topological defects, biophysicists find [1d]
- How root growth is stimulated by nitrate: Researchers decipher signaling chain [2d]
- How competitive gaming on Discord fosters social connections [2d]
- 'All-in-one,' single-atom could power both sides of water splitting [2d]
- Letting children play can support development [2d]
- Birds change altitude to survive epic journeys across deserts and seas [2d]
- Social media advertising suppresses voting in targeted communities, research shows [2d]
- Neutron scattering helps clarify magnetic behavior in altermagnetic material [2d]
- New generation of climate models sheds first light on long-standing Pacific puzzle [2d]
- Blood marker from dementia research could help track aging across the animal world [2d]
- Scientists home in on Acinetobacter baumannii's resistance evolution [2d]
- NASA targets March for first moon mission by Artemis astronauts after fueling test success [2d]
- Growing number of Americans report experiencing extreme cold, poll finds [2d]
- Symbiotic bacteria in planthoppers break record for smallest non-organelle genome ever found [2d]
- Flexible force fields can protect our return to the moon [2d]
- How massive lava fields formed in the Pacific Northwest [2d]
- A new way to judge how the economy performs in booms and busts [2d]
- Robot clean-up crews tackle litter on Europe's seabed [2d]
- Can a chatbot be a co-author? AI helps crack a long-stalled gluon amplitude proof [2d]
- How early farming unintentionally bred highly competitive 'warrior' wheat [2d]
- Americium, curium and californium—crystallizing the rarest elements [2d]
- Quantum trembling: Why there are no truly flat molecules [2d]
- Why hikers need a backup for the maps on their phones [2d]
- Pregnancy complications may have helped wipe out Neanderthals [2d]
- New book explores links between disasters and development [2d]
- Atom-thin electronics withstand space radiation, potentially surviving for centuries in orbit [2d]
- Cleaner fish show intelligence typical of mammals [2d]
- Phonon lasers unlock ultrabroadband acoustic frequency combs [2d]
- Near-infrared study finds no clear counterpart to mysterious gamma-ray source [2d]
- Study identifies oaks, dry duff and debris as top power line failure risks [2d]
- Quantum entanglement could link distant telescopes for sharper images [2d]
- The persistence of gravitational wave memory [2d]
- NASA moves forward with Artemis II tanking test that could set up moonshot mission [2d]
- A 'blood moon' is coming to the US in March—and the next good one isn't until 2029 [2d]
- SpaceX launch to feature rare booster landing in Bahamas [2d]
- A hidden step before meiosis could reshape efforts to treat infertility [2d]
- Fans flock to Japan zoo to see viral baby monkey Punch [2d]
- Scientists reveal best- and worst-case scenarios for a warming Antarctica [2d]
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