The Brutalist Report - science
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- No new articles in the Past 24 Hours.
- Which 'money type' are you? New research maps financial habits of young Australians [1d]
- When a spouse starts a business, the other partner pays a hidden price [1d]
- Improving scientific accuracy in journalism [1d]
- As the world faces yet another crisis, why are leaders still resisting remote work? [1d]
- Rethinking energy transition participation: Why citizens are more than a box to tick [1d]
- Q&A: IceCube Observatory upgrades improve search for elusive cosmic messenger [1d]
- Research at Chernobyl and Fukushima shows how radioactive materials move in the environment [1d]
- Screen-driven schooling is rewiring how students think, read, write and learn [1d]
- Getting the jump on evolution: Cane toads adapt at speed [1d]
- Parents may be the missing key to keeping kids safe online, research suggests [1d]
- The way primates parent their young shows how strict labels like parenting styles miss the mark [1d]
- Malaria rebound spurs AI-driven hunt for parasite genes linked to deadly cases [1d]
- Self‑replicating circular RNA persists in extreme environments: Insights from hot spring microbiomes [1d]
- Toxins from Great Salt Lake dust are absorbed by plants, soils and human bodies [1d]
- A few extra minutes of daily play can strengthen your bond with your dog in four weeks [1d]
- Breathing new life into an ancient mystery: Unlocking the trilobite's respiratory secrets [1d]
- Hurricanes devastated Florida's East Coast. Then seagrass made an unexpected comeback [1d]
- Before the melt begins, sea stars show hidden immune collapse and tissue failure driving a coastal die-off [1d]
- Penguin muscle map reveals how waddles and underwater 'flight' both work [1d]
- Lack of robust regulation and information about contaminated industrial sites in India poses public health risk [1d]
- North African-linked stone tools reached Iberia 700,000 years ago, evidence suggests [1d]
- Cell membranes may store memories after electrical stimulation [1d]
- Collagen analysis finds wider prey use by Neanderthals and modern humans [1d]
- Some cancer drugs disrupt taste by changing the cells inside taste buds, study shows [1d]
- Rose pangenome maps 55,000 genes, opening new path for breeding [1d]
- Researchers develop, validate new scale to measure use of evidence in evidence-based management [1d]
- Scientists take a step toward a quantum internet using New York City's fiber [1d]
- Deep-rooted grass stores significantly more carbon, says new study [1d]
- Photonic chip generates milliwatt-level UV light, 100 times brighter than before [1d]
- Mapping the hidden structure of the universe [1d]
- Astronomers precisely date rare brown dwarf companion, offering new test for how these objects cool [1d]
- Half of America sits in democratic limbo—and that silent middle may decide what breaks next [1d]
- How changing ice conditions impact Great Lakes communities [1d]
- Your phone's next speed boost may come from a strange magnetic jump that rewrites how chips handle heat [1d]
- Bacteria's 'two-way door' revealed: How antimicrobials cross cell membranes [1d]
- Hydrocarbons may power next-generation batteries with lower costs and emissions [1d]
- New research reveals cell proteins that drive severe viral infections [1d]
- Crabs' iconic sideways walk evolved from common ancestor, study suggests [1d]
- Milk's hidden carbon bill is bigger than advertised as damaged grass and soils drive emissions higher [1d]
- How colonialism still shapes extinctions today, from island species losses to disappearing languages [1d]
- AI tool predicts how new drug molecules move before costly lab tests [1d]
- High school journalism leading the way in financial literacy, even if business isn't part of curriculum [1d]
- Adding water sources boosted reproducing males in wild asses, raising genetic diversity [1d]
- Birds and monkeys in the Amazon share information via 'internet of the forest' [1d]
- What Bronze Age people ate and drank: South Caucasus pottery reveals a surprisingly diverse menu [1d]
- These three plant bacteria turn soy yogurt into a safer, creamier product while stripping out troublesome sugars [1d]
- Mosses and thale cress share the same leaf growth principles, despite 400 million years of separate evolution [1d]
- NASA on track for future missions with initial Artemis II assessments [1d]
- Goose poop could fuel a circular agriculture strategy, research shows [1d]
- Plastics found in tomato and wheat crops stunt growth, study finds [1d]
- Hubble reveals Crab Nebula filaments racing outward at 3.4 million mph [1d]
- One tiny gene switch turns red lettuce upside down and reveals a hidden chemical tradeoff [1d]
- ATLAS acts as a cosmic-ray laboratory with first measurement of proton–oxygen collisions [1d]
- More effective, longer-lasting sunscreen made from natural extracts [1d]
- One daily habit is quietly shaping preschool language, and it is not just screen time [1d]
- US climate sees decline in both hot and cold extreme temperatures since 1899, researchers claim [2d]
- Better-fed calves are more motivated to play, pioneering study shows [2d]
- How Bruce the half‑beak kea weaponized his disability to become the alpha bird [2d]
- Missing link in evolution of ancient fish found in 150-year-old museum specimen [2d]
- Water-based process could make compostable packaging practical at industrial speeds [2d]
- New plastic film covered in thousands of tiny pillars can tear apart viruses on contact [2d]
- Earth Day started as a US 'teach-in' 56 years ago. Now it's a global event [2d]
- Breakthrough sulfur polymer kills dangerous fungi and bacteria while sparing human and plant cells [2d]
- Our efforts to halt global forest loss aren't working: New research [2d]
- The edge of the Milky Way's star-forming disk revealed [2d]
- 'Slopaganda': How AI-generated content becomes a political weapon [2d]
- Less food waste: Supermarkets can save money by giving surplus food away [2d]
- Perovskite quantum dots crack two big barriers, staying stable in polar solvents and growing with atomic precision [2d]
- Put a nanodiamond under intense pressure and it becomes flexible [2d]
- NASA rolls out Artemis III moon rocket core stage [2d]
- Black bears are emerging as roaming reservoirs of antibiotic-resistant bacteria across expanding US ranges [2d]
- CHIME tracks a hyperactive repeating fast radio burst source [2d]
- Sex bias against women skews government violence statistics [2d]
- Telling people they might lose motivates more than telling them they might win, research shows [2d]
- Alternating atomic layers enable rare electron pairing mechanism in new unconventional superconductor [2d]
- Euclid Space Warps citizen science project helps hunt for strong gravitational lenses [2d]
- One-step method reveals structures of RNA-protein complexes in living cells [2d]
- When managers 'walk around,' employee voice may shrink, paper warns [2d]
- Stretching and squeezing diamond opens new path for ultra-precise quantum sensors [2d]
- Uganda's Python Cave reveals how a Marburg virus outbreak could begin [2d]
- Small-scale and backyard egg producers in New England invited to participate in survey [2d]
- A laser inspired by black holes: Extreme physics recreated in the lab [2d]
- Severe COVID lockdowns cost home sellers and landlords millions [2d]
- Simple ocean-based model forecasts a powerful El Niño, over 2 °C warmer than normal [2d]
- Floating biodegradable beads remove oil in 60 minutes and stay easy to recover [2d]
- Breaking a shared defense restores antibiotics against two cystic fibrosis lung bacteria [2d]
- AI maps mammals' molecular 'dark matter' by predicting billions of missing metabolites [2d]
- Laser bursts flip nanoscale magnetic vortices at blistering speeds, opening a path to brain-like spintronics [2d]
- Pressure-tuned quantum spin liquid-like behavior observed in material Y-kapellasite [2d]
- The fast-track tree breeding method that is restoring European ash to the landscape [2d]
- Earthquake sets off brief tsunami alert and a megaquake advisory in northern Japan [2d]
- Mars rover detects never-before-seen organic compounds in new experiment [2d]
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