The Brutalist Report - science
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- New evapotranspiration method could recover up to 30% missing tower energy [1d]
- Study finds key traits of condom 'stealthers' [1d]
- Quantum sensors use atoms, electrons and light as ultra‑steady rulers [1d]
- New research offers practical biosecurity tools to limit poultry disease spread [1d]
- Friend or foul? Exploring the ancient bond between pigeons and people [1d]
- US government is using AI more, but hiring gaps and risk culture still slow progress [2d]
- New RNA tool maps structure and motifs across organisms and viruses [2d]
- AI tool fuses five satellite datasets to help track harmful algal blooms [2d]
- Disability inclusion in advertising can build stronger brand affinity [2d]
- Better helium reporting to improve fission and fusion materials modeling [2d]
- Young Fraser River Chinook salmon swimming in 'chemical soup,' study finds [2d]
- Optoelectronic synapse shows exceptional photoresponse for neuromorphic vision [2d]
- How economic growth in low-income countries can also protect biodiversity [2d]
- Extreme weather events may leave rivers unable to rebound [2d]
- How Earth recycles continents deep underground [2d]
- Cities change storms, but the impacts depend on the storm itself [2d]
- Ancient Atlantic warming points to how oceans may lock away heat for centuries [2d]
- Dominant fish face higher microplastic risk than subordinates in social groups [2d]
- Contemporary archaeologists dig into the present—bringing those so often forgotten into the light [2d]
- Urban aerosols grow faster in polluted air, sharpening climate model gaps [2d]
- 15 Australian companies switched to a four‑day work week. It went surprisingly well [2d]
- Neptune's mysterious moon Nereid may be original survivor of Triton's chaotic arrival [2d]
- The complete evolution of spin glass from order to chaos [2d]
- Scientists solve 50-year mystery of plant immunity by unlocking debneyol's blueprint [2d]
- Showing empathy can make you more attractive, even when you frown [2d]
- Reusable tea cups have hidden thresholds for achieving environmental sustainability [2d]
- Fragility found in a high value shark population [2d]
- Paper calls for biologists to rethink how they analyze the impact of climate [2d]
- Educational analysis of students' performance uses dynamic approach to include life's variables [2d]
- 129,000 years of crocodiles: What we know about Australasia's ancient apex predators [2d]
- How you map numbers in your mind isn't universal, even among people who read in the same language [2d]
- Air-conditioning cools homes but may weaken climate action [2d]
- The quantum key to seeing through chaos [2d]
- Climate change spurs weight gain in owl monkeys [2d]
- Discovery of new fossils in Northwest Canada changes view of early animal evolution [2d]
- Cows can recognize familiar human faces and match them to voices [2d]
- Scientists improve knowledge on sea level rise—and confirm it has been accelerating since 1960 [2d]
- Thousands of UK beekeepers submit honey to benefit environmental science [2d]
- How climate change is destroying Arctic cultural heritage sites [2d]
- Rising seawater heat may collapse coral oxygen flow before bleaching appears [2d]
- Disability compounds employment woes for people with criminal records, and vice versa [2d]
- Insects in the city: Flowers alone may not be enough to sustain them [2d]
- Flying sick: One in three pilots reported working despite illness [2d]
- Astronomers uncover why some solar eruptions die [2d]
- Overturning a 200-year belief: New surface design enables two distinct wetting states on a single substrate [2d]
- Why millions of Europeans vote one way nationally, and the opposite in Brussels [2d]
- New insights into how the human hand evolved from our ape-like ancestors [2d]
- NASA's Fermi glimpses power source of supercharged supernovae [2d]
- Company location, rather than growth, may lead to higher investment returns [2d]
- New field evidence from Canada shows old wells can leave a hidden leakage footprint [2d]
- How city life changes bird song and why many species do not adapt [2d]
- Teaching children to be better, more critical internet users [2d]
- Fast-food waste driven by wrong orders, Australian review finds [2d]
- High-entropy catalyst lets ammonia fuel cell reach world-class power and durability [2d]
- For whistleblowing, bigger rewards can backfire [2d]
- Chiral carbon nanotube films deliver giant light-conversion effect [2d]
- Space storms light up Japan's sky with red auroras climbing far higher than expected [2d]
- Politically connected firms face softer penalties for bribery [2d]
- When Mendel's rules don't apply: Mouse study reveals hidden epigenetic inheritance [2d]
- How does street lighting impact wildlife and when should we turn off the lights? [2d]
- Carbon markets underestimate the risks U.S. forests face from climate change, researchers warn [2d]
- Genes without borders: Coral babies can travel vast distances across the Pacific Ocean [2d]
- Early complex life clung to oxygenated seafloors for hundreds of millions of years, scientists discover [2d]
- Food and drink plastics dominate marine litter across 112 nations, research reveals [2d]
- What BMX teaches us about belonging (and not belonging) [2d]
- Forbidden friends become former friends after moms voice disapproval [2d]
- Asteroid impact site reveals possible traces of early life [2d]
- The fungus that spoils nearly everything: Gray mold secret revealed [2d]
- India issues heat wave warnings as fear of El Nino looms [2d]
- After 10 years of upgrades, this legendary telescope has returned to chase black holes, asteroids and cosmic chemistry [2d]
- What if the direction of a magnet could shape the building blocks of life? [2d]
- Religion plays a greater role in the economy than previously thought, says paper [2d]
- An explanation for the massive black holes the JWST found in the early universe [2d]
- Bees found an unlikely new food source, and it could reshape how a destructive forest disease travels [2d]
- Portugal burial reveals first known bone dental bridge in national archaeological record [2d]
- Image: NASA's Psyche mission captures Mars' Huygens Crater [2d]
- Lab fish cycles are hours out of sync with natural ones, researchers discover [2d]
- Tiny sea creature Porpita porpita may live adrift at sea for years longer than previously thought [2d]
- A SpaceX rocket will soon hit the moon, raising concerns about handing over space launches to private companies [2d]
- Image: NASA's Psyche mission images the crescent of Mars [2d]
- Image: NASA's Psyche mission spies Mars' wind-blown craters during close approach [2d]
- How face-building genes get ready early: Genome folding may prime crucial DNA switches [2d]
- Naturally occurring soil fungi could boost rice yields while reducing reliance on synthetic fertilizers [2d]
- Could future Mars settlers print their own tools? [2d]
- Argentine researchers collect rodents for hantavirus tests [2d]
- Zoo reaches historic milestone for Puerto Rican crested toad conservation efforts with more than 12,000 tadpoles [2d]
- Sky bridges, citizen science protect endangered Malaysia monkeys [2d]
- SpaceX's IPO moonshot draws some doubters on Wall Street [2d]
- A new whale detection network launches in San Francisco Bay, alerting ships in real time [2d]
- Pressure mounts at United Nations for climate change 'lifeline' [2d]
- Norway reports Europe's first case of bird flu in a polar bear [2d]
- Help wanted: Australian conservation group seeks new koala rescue dog [2d]
- DR Congo fishermen resort to trawling plastic waste [2d]
- 5.8 magnitude earthquake hits Peru, damaging buildings and injuring 27 [2d]
- Sri Lanka teeth reveal rising plant diets thousands of years before agriculture [2d]
- Japan to sell eels bred in captivity in 'world first' [2d]
- Glowing fungi expose final enzyme that could make bioluminescent tools more efficient [2d]
- Universal free school meals may improve student behavior [2d]
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