The Brutalist Report - science
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- New method rapidly analyzes cell proteins and metabolites [3d]
- How an eye physician who translated classical Greek medicine into Arabic helped form Western medical thought [3d]
- By age 7, most children quickly spot individuals' social biases toward social groups, study finds [4d]
- 3D-printed 'spanlastics' could change how cancer drugs reach tumors [4d]
- Study finds 70% of remediated Los Angeles yards still exceed lead limit [4d]
- Review details photocatalyst–biocatalyst systems for semi-artificial photosynthesis [4d]
- Global warming may be a boon for this aggressive prairie plant [4d]
- Water-repelling surfaces reveal surprising charging effects [4d]
- If life exists in Venus's atmosphere, it could have come from Earth [4d]
- Improving air temperature forecasts one to five weeks in advance without new model simulations [4d]
- A nanoparticle therapy to treat lung cancer and associated muscle wasting at the same time [4d]
- Advancing synthetic cells: A more flexible system to replicate cellular functions [4d]
- Dual-drug nanotherapy crosses blood–brain barrier, improving survival in preclinical glioblastoma models [4d]
- Fluorescence imaging technique reveals hidden magnetic chemistry in living systems [4d]
- Experiments refute dark matter claim [4d]
- Cell 'snowball' may be answer to large-scale tissue engineering [4d]
- New plan aims to track microplastics in U.S. drinking water, EPA says [4d]
- 'Switch' behind flash drought in Puerto Rico uncovered [4d]
- Stitching precise patterns—with lasers [4d]
- More dives, fewer reef sharks: Caribbean study links tourism pressure to shark sightings [4d]
- Body size, lifespan and mobility can help predict which species are most threatened as planet changes [4d]
- Parasitic tapeworm—a risk to domestic dogs and humans—found in Washington coyotes [4d]
- Mechanical inputs boost diamond quantum sensor states as Q factor tops one million [4d]
- Bacteria are weaving forever chemicals directly into their cell membranes, study finds [4d]
- Q&A: What drives the rise in red tides that threaten human health? [4d]
- Analysis finds geometric thinking may come from wandering, not a human-only math module [4d]
- How to eat an elephant: Fossil find in Tanzania shows oldest signs of butchering these giant mammals [4d]
- Spring cold snaps harm nesting tree swallows, but some show resilience [4d]
- Rating community resilience with a deep learning framework [4d]
- Origins of Earth's most powerful ocean current revealed [4d]
- Scientists identify potential new target for disrupting mosquito reproduction [4d]
- Why cats stop eating—it's not just fullness [4d]
- Expanded MAGIC toolkit makes genome-wide single-cell mosaic analysis possible in Drosophila [4d]
- Artemis II crew breaks Apollo 13 record, reaching 252,760 miles from Earth [4d]
- Three Himalayan predators coexist by partitioning prey, reducing direct competition [4d]
- Robotic floats uncover hidden ocean chemistry in low-oxygen zones [4d]
- New York Bight is a key spring habitat for endangered sei whales, research reveals [4d]
- Should wildlife parks be fenced? We studied 60 African examples for an answer [4d]
- Pigeons tend to respond 'at the edge of chaos,' study finds [4d]
- AI reveals hidden connections within legal systems [4d]
- How the female baboon body has the final say in sperm selection [4d]
- How a common herbicide affects honeybee brains and behavior [4d]
- Quantum ground state of rotation achieved for the first time in two dimensions [4d]
- Polymers built inside the body through blood-catalyzed chemistry allow on-demand brain control [4d]
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