The Brutalist Report - science
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- Soaring petrol prices are hurting more than your wallet [1d]
- Spotted a jellyfish bloom recently? Here's what may have triggered it [1d]
- Five Australian animals that could be extinct by 2050 [1d]
- Genetic markers fast-track breeding of seedless muscadine grapes [1d]
- Study reveals that bottom trawling catches thousands of fish species, including those most at risk [1d]
- Water conservation works, but climate change is outpacing it: Phoenix, Denver and Las Vegas show the future [1d]
- A 'stemness checkpoint' helps control stem cell identity [1d]
- Online comments can shape how political social media content is perceived [1d]
- AMOC collapse could turn Southern Ocean into carbon source, adding 0.2°C to global warming [1d]
- From 'sustainable' to 'regenerative' agriculture: What's in a name? [1d]
- Ecuador study finds tropical rainforest biodiversity rebounds over 90% in 30 years [1d]
- Ancient architecture shows public opinion influenced Maya divine kings [1d]
- Global musicians face the same 'streaming paradox' as US- and UK-based artists, study finds [1d]
- Mathematical model predicts fish freshness in real time [1d]
- Satellites capture the volatile human–luminescence relationship [1d]
- Momentum-engineered photonic states make bulk silicon shine [1d]
- The binding sites that guide fungal 'vesicle hitchhiking'—new study maps mRNA transport [1d]
- Plagiarized research passed automated tests, and I detected it—but only because it copied my work [1d]
- Online review structure, not just sentiment, predicts what readers find helpful [1d]
- A greener route to citrus-derived therapeutics: What a new bromination method changes [1d]
- Uncharted island will soon appear on nautical charts [1d]
- DNA evidence reveals a Stone Age population collapse in France [1d]
- Buried bounty: Caribou survival depends on lichen and snow [1d]
- An enzyme produced by fungus may replace chemicals in the paper industry [1d]
- Livestock may be rewriting elephants' gut microbiomes in Kenya's protected reserves [1d]
- Mussels and mistletoe inspire design for sustainable materials [1d]
- Human-altered mountains drive most fatal landslides worldwide, analysis finds [1d]
- From joyrides to assault, 'crimefluencer' networks are coercing young people into breaking the law [1d]
- Pollinator-friendly gardens don't have to sacrifice style [1d]
- High Mountain Asia's melting glaciers may threaten future water security [1d]
- City animals act in the same brazen ways around the world [1d]
- Robust against noise, geometric-phase swap gates bring stability to quantum operations [1d]
- Should emojis be used in workplace communications? [1d]
- Mangrove crab outruns its namesake, expanding its range 200 miles north [1d]
- Penguins in remote Patagonia are carrying 'forever chemicals' signals [1d]
- Summer is getting longer, and it's happening faster than we thought [1d]
- AI trained like a Rubik's Cube solver simplifies particle physics equations [2d]
- Does listening to audiobooks improve learning? [2d]
- Research traces evolution of anglerfishes' famed fishing-rod lures [2d]
- Student research on coronal holes improves space weather forecasting [2d]
- Mapping urban heat from space reveals dangerous inequities in LA public parks [2d]
- A drug discovery bottleneck? How cheaper reagents could speed branched molecule synthesis [2d]
- The lengths male octopuses go to protect the arm they need to mate [2d]
- Tracking reef winners and losers after a Category 4 storm [2d]
- If you're a perfectionist at work, your boss's expectations may matter more than your own, research finds [2d]
- Scientists warn UK biodiversity report may distort evidence with security framing [2d]
- New glassfrog species named for first Ecuadorian woman to win a gold medal [2d]
- Ancient tectonic processes are the key to locating rare minerals [2d]
- Sinking land drives coastal flood risk on densely populated Java Island [2d]
- Electron–atom scattering encodes the quantum state of electron wave packets [2d]
- Unique double baptistery and mysterious marble block uncovered at Byzantine cathedral in Israel [2d]
- Optical control of nuclear spins in molecules points to new paths for quantum technologies [2d]
- A roadmap for atomic force microscopy use in next-generation semiconductor and energy materials research [2d]
- Glucose transport may hinge on a fleeting transition-like state [2d]
- Avoiding the very hungry caterpillar: Herbivores pose unexpected threat to predatory mite eggs [2d]
- Why some bosses reward 'dark traits' at work, and what it costs later [2d]
- Global trade in wild birds is poorly monitored: The risks to wildlife, ecosystems and human health [2d]
- Physicists zero in on the mass of the fundamental W boson particle [2d]
- Countries suffer when credit rating agencies lack data: How to fix the problem at source [2d]
- Why some children with learning difficulties get identified, and others don't [2d]
- Can serendipity be harnessed? Reflecting on unplanned outcomes offers benefits [2d]
- AI uncovers hidden immune defenses inside bacteria [2d]
- Seal tooth pendant reveals ancient human culture and long-distance trading [2d]
- The oldest breath: A 300-million-year-old mummy reveals the origins of how amniotes breathe [2d]
- Sound-sensing hair bundles in our ears act as tiny thermodynamic machines [2d]
- Neanderthals in Central Europe hunted pond turtles—not for food, but likely for their shells [2d]
- 'Pinprick of light': Artemis crew witnesses meteorite impacts on moon [2d]
- Triple threat emerges as sharks, beach nourishment and murky waters collide [2d]
- Split shift: A surprising twist in the biology of aging [2d]
- Absinthe: What the ban on France's aromatic spirit teaches us about modern-day blaming and shaming [2d]
- Celestial wonders in Leo [2d]
- Giant jars, ancient bells, buried bones and a mystery that endures [2d]
- Hacks, doxxing and deepfakes: Are we overexposed as a society? [2d]
- Heat from traffic is contributing to rises in city temperatures, study finds [2d]
- A volcanic medley near Mammoth Lakes [2d]
- Ancient Romans were obsessed with a plant said to be a contraception and an aphrodisiac. Then one day, it went extinct [2d]
- 'Screams of delight': Artemis crew flying home to thrilled NASA scientists [2d]
- Why doesn't the US recycle more plastic? Study points to lack of access [2d]
- Photos show stunning views of the moon and Earth from the Artemis II mission [2d]
- Artemis II astronauts make long-distance call to the space station as they head home from the moon [2d]
- Atmospheric dust gives plants nutrients through their leaves, study finds [2d]
- Seizure of 2,000 ants at Nairobi airport highlights the hidden scale of insect trafficking [2d]
- Climate change may speed evolution through inherited gene regulation changes [2d]
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