The Brutalist Report - science
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- No new articles in the Past 24 Hours.
- Prolonged drought linked to instability in key nitrogen-cycling microbes in Connecticut salt marsh [47d]
- First field training officer may set use-of-force habits, study suggests [47d]
- Hubble and Euclid zoom into cosmic eye [47d]
- Northern hemisphere snow cover is shrinking—new analysis tracks how fast [47d]
- Space Force won't launch Vulcan rockets until booster problem solved [47d]
- A tool lets residents track Texas power outages and aids in disaster response [47d]
- Radiocarbon dating rewrites angiosperm trees' lifespan records worldwide [47d]
- Planting big native trees early can simplify forest restoration in Aotearoa [47d]
- Poking a nanostring: Scientists uncover energy cascades in tiny resonators [47d]
- Ancient plant-eater with a twisted jaw and sideways-facing teeth was a 'living fossil' in its own time [47d]
- Jackdaw chicks listen to adults to learn about predators [47d]
- Four decades of data give unique insight into the sun's inner life [47d]
- Bacterial abundance drives dissolved organic carbon distribution in North Atlantic gyre, model suggests [47d]
- 'Mismatched' plant water isotopes vanish with better sampling: Study points to better drought forecasts [47d]
- The 'Bloom cycle' is a newly described biochemical pathway that explains key plant processes [47d]
- Paternal mitochondria in plants can rescue defective maternal DNA, study reveals [47d]
- Pollen exposure linked to poorer exam results taken at the end of secondary school [47d]
- Intermediate phases unlock faster nanoparticle crystallization [47d]
- Hard-to-make diastereomers: How a cage-like allyl reagent changes the outcome [47d]
- A fanged frog long thought to be one species is revealing itself to be several [47d]
- From hyperbolic in-plane anisotropy to an optical chirality: A new route to nanoscale circular polarizers [47d]
- The wetland puzzle that stumped hydrology for decades—how physics and AI joined forces to predict unmeasured regions [47d]
- Examining public perceptions of assisted reproductive technologies in wildlife conservation [47d]
- Urban trees can absorb more CO₂ than cars emit on some summer days, Munich study shows [47d]
- A community-driven standard for reporting metal–organic framework syntheses [47d]
- Discovery of natural mechanism behind ferroptosis solves longstanding puzzle in cell biology [47d]
- Recycling jumps when garbage collection drops, new research shows [47d]
- Tiny flows, big insights: Microfluidics system boosts super-resolution microscopy [47d]
- Late scientist's notebooks help finish study of rare 55-million-year-old tarpon fossil [47d]
- BaSi₂-supported nickel catalyst boosts low-temperature hydrogen production [47d]
- A common CRISPR platform enables comparative studies of multicellularity in social amoebae [47d]
- The key to attacking 'undruggable' proteins: Transient clustering state reveals a moving target [47d]
- How an underground fungal map of the world's oldest, slowest-growing rainforest trees can boost Earth's resilience [47d]
- Sting in the tail of scorpion venom accelerates blood clotting, could help save lives [47d]
- Chemically 'stapled' peptides used to target difficult-to-treat cancers [47d]
- A Plan B for space? On the risks of concentrating national space power in private hands [47d]
- World's biggest astronomy camera seeks to answer pressing questions about the universe [47d]
- Maize may have more importance in pre-European Michigan than previously thought [47d]
- What is happiness? A philosopher looks for answers [47d]
- The RCW 36 nebula: A cosmic hawk and its baby stars [47d]
- Moths use magnetic compass and visual cues to guide them during migration [47d]
- A 2,850‑year‑old mass grave in Serbia reveals a shift in prehistoric violence [47d]
- Rainfall can shape bird populations as much as temperature, global study reveals [47d]
- Arrowhead marks found in Central Asia could prove the existence of Homo sapiens 80,000 years ago [47d]
- Ancient zircon crystals provide a window into early Earth history [47d]
- HETDEX data reveal a vast 'sea of light' between early galaxies [47d]
- Want to improve worker performance with AI? First, help staff understand their own strengths and weaknesses [47d]
- Liquid crystal phase in antiferromagnets can be detected electrically [47d]
- Wildlife imaging shows that AI models aren't as smart as we think [47d]
- Letting atomic simulations learn from phase diagrams [47d]
- Having a 'growth mindset' helps entrepreneurs adapt to setbacks [47d]
- Life forms can planet hop on asteroid debris—and survive [47d]
- 'Natural' and 'healthy' food labels may mislead consumers [47d]
- What happens if truth is lost? Philosopher explains how truth defines our humanity [47d]
- Remote work opens doors for workers with poor mental health [47d]
- Study finds 77% of US national parks are highly vulnerable to climate change [47d]
- Studying snakes' ability to stand upright could inform soft robotics and more [47d]
- Genetic library for soybean cyst nematode could renew resistance, profitability for soybean growers [47d]
- Rewilding could fill gap left by Panama's lost giants [47d]
- Fans value ethics over innovation at AI hologram concerts, new study finds [47d]
- Brain structure volume linked to increased social tolerance in macaques [47d]
- Implementing selective immigration and import policies could counter the rise in populism [47d]
- A new 'uncertainty relation' for quantum measurement errors [47d]
- Climate shifts could leave many protected floodplains too dry [47d]
- 70-year field study finds fertilizer imbalance can halve mycorrhizal fungi [47d]
- A 690-million-kilometer journey through space ends for Australia's SpIRIT mission [47d]
- Asteroid Ryugu samples offer new insights into early solar system magnetism [47d]
- Reduce rust by dumping your wok twice, and other kitchen tips [47d]
- Newly excavated Maya wetland settlement shows the civilization's adaptation to changing climate [47d]
- Left-handed people may have a psychological edge in competition [47d]
- Did plants nearly wipe out all marine life on Earth—twice? [47d]
- How realistic does a supermarket need to be? Study examines consumer research methods [47d]
- Brazilian fossil site yields smallest rhynchosaur fossil ever recorded [47d]
- AI biases can influence people's perception of history [47d]
- Synthetic gene medicines may disrupt DNA repair [47d]
- AI technology detects real-time koala crossing in first for field [47d]
- Deadly soil fungal pathogen puts Australia's reptiles at risk of extinction [47d]
- Hidden atomic dichotomy drives superconductivity in ultra-thin compound [47d]
- Researchers engineer cold-tolerant proteins to give US an Arctic edge [47d]
- Australians face misinformation online daily, research reveals [47d]
- Hairdressers could be a secret weapon in tackling climate change, new research finds [47d]
- Study reveals how end-of-world beliefs shape Americans' response to global threats [47d]
- Digital targeting creeps out customers [47d]
- Travel far, breed hard, and die young: Short-eared owls and why they should be studied [47d]
- Permafrost is key to carbon storage. That makes northern wildfires even more dangerous [47d]
- Warming El Nino may return later this year: UN [47d]
- Crocodile caught in an Australian creek 1,200 miles from its tropical habitat [47d]
- Tiny Purgatorius fossils in Denver Basin hint at early primate spread southward [48d]
- Modern twist on wildfire management methods has a bonus feature that protects water supplies [48d]
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