The Brutalist Report - science
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- Study shows highlighting others' achievements on LinkedIn sparks the most engagement [1d]
- The Bayeux Tapestry tells only the winner's story—but the other side can be found in old English texts [1d]
- Wildfire risk is now spreading to cool climates like the Scottish Highlands and Irish uplands [1d]
- Blue and fin whale sightings on the rise in the Southeast Atlantic [1d]
- Imaging ellipsometry tracks MXene thin-film quality during fabrication without damage [1d]
- Understanding the mechanisms of collective cell movement [1d]
- Just outside Jupiter, one region may have forged six meteorite parent bodies [1d]
- We're 'green chemists'—why we think this emerging science can transform the way the world uses its resources [1d]
- Why we live alone—and what it means for the climate and our sense of community [1d]
- Making biomolecules glow: New dye solves imaging interference problem [1d]
- Novel porous gel changes color, shrinks and hardens when it detects target molecules [1d]
- Nickelate reveals nodeless gap, providing key clue to high-temperature superconductivity [1d]
- Some technologies use accelerated natural processes to capture carbon, but can they store it durably? [1d]
- Arctic thaw unleashes mining-like pollution across hundreds Arctic waterways [1d]
- Physicists figure out how to reduce formation of 'viscous fingers' [1d]
- Student talent drives simpler method for programming artificial muscles in soft robots [1d]
- Scientists discover thriving hard-substrate fauna in Oceania's deep sea [1d]
- 'Designer' superconducting diamond: Researchers uncover path to multi-modality quantum chips [1d]
- South China Sea coral reefs reveal carbon stores rivaling mangroves and seagrasses [1d]
- SpaceX to retry Starship test launch Friday [1d]
- Rediscovering science: New knowledge hidden in old data [1d]
- Second ribosome binding site helps explain how tetracyclines work [1d]
- Travel hookups go digital, bringing intimacy, risk and emotional exhaustion [1d]
- Key switch controlling soil fungi symbiosis could solve a longstanding agricultural problem [1d]
- Bodies in fashion: Diversity is up, but the ideal stays the same [1d]
- AI makes a major breakthrough in a math problem that had stumped experts for decades [1d]
- Ocean acidification is ruining reef fishes' social lives, study finds [1d]
- Sequential antibiotic strategy can weaken dangerous pathogens [1d]
- Agentic AI could help electron microscopes plan, adapt and analyze experiments [1d]
- Better protecting consumers against fake reviews with a new training method [1d]
- Using pulsars as ultra-precise gravitational probes to 'weigh' neighboring galaxies [1d]
- AI will not take your job, it can transform it—but only if you trust it, says researcher [1d]
- Coral refuges in Western Australia resist 2025 bleaching through record marine heat [1d]
- Chimpanzees' unusually protracted and vulnerable adolescences [1d]
- Hidden for 100 years, bright pink shrub identified as new Australian species [1d]
- Hi-res microscopes give biologists petabytes of data. Scientists are creating an AI assistant to make sense of it [1d]
- Q&A: What can plant evolution teach people about breeding better crops? [1d]
- Rice feeds billions of people—but its role in fueling climate change is growing [1d]
- Stressed crystal creates nanoscale patterns on chip materials at room temperature [1d]
- Platypus population expands to 20 in Australia's Royal National Park [1d]
- Social mammals live longer—but bigger groups don't add that many extra years [1d]
- How countries can build effective DNA barcoding networks [1d]
- Unclear tasks and command structures may increase fatigue in disaster responders [1d]
- Earth's outer core beneath Pacific reversed direction in 2010, satellite data reveal [1d]
- Astronomers discover a super-Earth orbiting a nearby red dwarf [1d]
- Heat vulnerability follows more than temperature, and this global map exposes the overlooked fault lines [1d]
- Hubble captures galaxy cluster MACS J1141.6-1905 [1d]
- How the Great Pyramid of Giza has survived 4,500 years of Egyptian earthquakes [1d]
- Asexual lizards, virgin births and clones—the all‑female species of the animal kingdom [1d]
- Image: Tornado draws a jagged line in Mississippi [1d]
- Researchers collaborate on effort to map biodiversity on Indonesia's unexplored seamounts [1d]
- Superconducting vortices moonlight as controllable qubits, turning a disruption into a resource [1d]
- Midwest flamingos and 'hurricane toads': Wildlife's strange storm stories [1d]
- Lost elephant calf reunites with family after researchers track herd across Samburu reserve [2d]
- New tool helps accurately assemble notoriously difficult bird genomes [2d]
- Human‑made chemicals are harming seals at the molecular level, study finds [2d]
- Why the intrinsic quantum effects of axion dark matter are completely undetectable [2d]
- Would you trust AI to help you find 'the one'? Dating apps are betting it can [2d]
- What do the Commonwealth Writers Prize AI allegations mean for prizes—and short stories? [2d]
- If you need to anesthetize a butterfly, here's the best way to do it [2d]
- Exploring education during times of economic crisis [2d]
- Listening to the rainforest: Researcher uses AI to monitor biodiversity through sound [2d]
- FIFA's huge World Cup to generate unprecedented cash and CO₂ [2d]
- Atlas reveals rocks with rare earth element potential, helping pinpoint new deposits [2d]
- With record-low snow, Colorado preps for wildfire onslaught [2d]
- Ancient DNA reveals web of marriage and migration in Peru centuries before Inca rule [2d]
- Trump eases curbs on planet-warming gases used in refrigerants [2d]
- 'Dread': Coral scientists fear bleaching El Nino could bring [2d]
- India generates record power as demand surges in severe heat wave [2d]
- Gibraltar monkeys eat soil in junk food detox, study finds [2d]
- Countdown glitch delays world's biggest rocket as SpaceX targets Friday retry [2d]
- Mangrove loss threatens Sierra Leone's oyster harvesters [2d]
- Something coming: what scientists know about a potential 'super' El Nino [2d]
- Seagrass found to produce new genetic individuals rather than clone itself, offering hope for 'underwater meadows' [2d]
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