The Brutalist Report - science
- No new articles in the Past 12 Hours.
- Mammals were adapting from life in the trees to living on the ground before dinosaur-killing asteroid, research reveals [312d]
- Illuminating single atoms for sustainable propylene production [313d]
- School inclusion still failing autistic students, say researchers [313d]
- Edible biofilm based on pomegranate peel extract extends the shelf life of strawberries [313d]
- How physical forces shape plants from the inside out to generate their complex 3D shapes [313d]
- South Africans flush toilets with drinkable water. Study in Cape Town looked at using seawater instead [313d]
- Widely used fungicide poses threat to sparrow chicks [313d]
- Making moves and hitting the breaks: Owl journeys surprise researchers in western Montana [313d]
- AI can be an effective tool for exploring corporate reporting, researcher finds [313d]
- Bees actively adjust flower choice based on color and distance: Updating 'flower constancy' beyond Darwin's theory [313d]
- Conductive polymers: First successful synthesis of polyaniline with golden luster [313d]
- North America is dripping from below, geoscientists discover [313d]
- Enhanced westerly winds lead to increased ocean heat transport to the East Antarctic Ice Sheet, study finds [313d]
- How do coconuts get their water? [313d]
- KiDS dataset doesn't shake up cold dark matter model after all, say researchers [313d]
- Surprising number of environmental pollutants found in hedgehogs [313d]
- Lunar polar regions could have microbes, modeling study suggests [313d]
- Can brain activity reveal your political party while grocery shopping? [313d]
- Sampling the plumes of Jupiter's volcano moon, Io [313d]
- How can we find cryovolcanoes on Europa? [313d]
- A dramatic Einstein ring seen by Webb [313d]
- Modeling lunar in-situ resource utilization can help plan future prototypes [313d]
- A classification of drugs based on their environmental impact [313d]
- Hidden side channels in quantum sources could compromise secure communication [313d]
- Alone with violence: When both perpetrator and society silence the victim [313d]
- NASA's SPHEREx takes first images, preps to study millions of galaxies [313d]
- Doubling down on metasurfaces: Bilayer device can control many forms of polarized light [313d]
- Microalgae and bacteria team up to convert carbon dioxide into useful products [313d]
- The rivers that science says shouldn't exist [313d]
- Air pollution and traffic noise increase the risk of stroke through combination effect [313d]
- UK public picks most important discoveries of all time [313d]
- Liquid-bodied robot enables precise eradication of implant-related biofilm infections [313d]
- A validated model can predict the growth of Listeria in artisanal fresh cheeses [313d]
- Tree rings from Canada's Gaspésie mountains reveal effects of global warming dating back almost a century [313d]
- Antitrust settlement could lower cost of buying a home [313d]
- Global cost of a 2025 tariff war could reach $1.4 trillion [313d]
- Use of antifungals in agriculture may increase resistance in an infectious yeast [313d]
- Urbanization reshapes soil microbes: Bacteria adapt, fungi resist [313d]
- When farmers and scientists collaborate, biodiversity and agriculture can thrive: Here's how [313d]
- Efficient self-assembly enhances self-healing in advanced siloxane materials [313d]
- Giving up on photosynthesis: How a borrowed bacterial gene allows some marine diatoms to live on a seaweed diet [313d]
- What Britons and Europeans really think about immigration—new analysis [313d]
- Urban cemeteries are at capacity. Here's how they can be more sustainable [313d]
- More than 99% of US dogs have a behavior problem, researcher finds [313d]
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- How memes spread conspiracy theories, and what to consider before sharing one [313d]
- Free open-access needs to be the norm for Canadian research [313d]
- Planned blackouts are becoming more common, and not having cash on hand could cost you [313d]
- Dogs see their world through smell, and scientists are starting to translate it like never before [313d]
- Land reparations are possible, and more than 225 US communities are already working to make amends [313d]
- How to engineer microbes to enable us to live on Mars [313d]
- Hidden virus harbored by fruit flies may influence experimental accuracy [313d]
- Live-cell labeling sheds light on how our DNA is packed and behaves in cells [313d]
- Cannabis retail expansion in Canada came with only a small uptick in the number of consumers [313d]
- Binding to surface sugars enhances omicron variant's cell attachment, researchers discover [313d]
- Global warming of more than 3°C this century may wipe 40% off the world's economy, new analysis reveals [313d]
- From barriers to belonging: How supporting inclusivity enhances the well-being of people with disabilities [313d]
- Study finds England's trainee teachers excel in early reading instruction [313d]
- Research examines best methods for growing Atlantic sea scallops [313d]
- Inner London residents told me their food waste problems—composting definitely isn't the answer [313d]
- A step towards life on Mars? Lichens survive Martian simulation in new study [313d]
- New agent inhibits Staphylococcus aureus toxin—giving hope to pneumonia patients [313d]
- Microplastics pollution from glitter can disrupt marine biomineralization [313d]
- Newborn warty birch caterpillars defend the world's smallest territory [313d]
- Mysterious falcon decline: American Kestrel juveniles thrive amid population drop [313d]
- Torrential rains created devastating inland seas in outback Queensland. Soon, they will fill Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre [313d]
- Food and fuel that farms itself: Genome sequences of five duckweed species reveal basis for unique plant traits [313d]
- Controlling quantum light at room temperature with tunable nanostructures and low voltage [313d]
- Using tranquilizers on racehorses is ethically questionable and puts horses and riders at risk [313d]
- Vincent van Gogh's 'The Starry Night' is not a masterpiece when it comes to flow physics, researchers say [313d]
- Stone tool discovery shows people in East Asia were innovating during the Middle Paleolithic [313d]
- From trading nutrients to storing carbon: Five things you didn't know about our underground fungi [313d]
- Report calls for industry-wide action to combat crop diseases and support affected farmers [313d]
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