The Brutalist Report - science
- No new articles in the Past 12 Hours.
- Pulsars could have tiny mountains [223d]
- Better heating method makes legumes easier to digest [223d]
- Engineered composite materials offer broad-spectrum synergistic radiation shielding [223d]
- Drought investments could save 10 times more than predicted 35% cost increase by 2035 [223d]
- 3D-printed model of a 500-year-old prosthetic hand hints at life of a Renaissance amputee [223d]
- Women and young people most likely to experience climate anxiety, study finds [223d]
- What's changed—and what hasn't—Since the EPA's endangerment finding [223d]
- Families play a key role in passing on religion—especially mothers [223d]
- Sunflower flour emerges as promising new base for plant-based meat alternatives [223d]
- Rethinking the demographic race: What is the future economic potential of India and China? [223d]
- Image: A Martian volcano in the mist [223d]
- In the farmers' video game, expansion trumps sustainability [223d]
- Strategic choices behind accounting standards unveiled in new study [223d]
- Boulder's winds aren't what they used to be [223d]
- India, Poland, Hungary make spaceflight comeback with ISS mission [223d]
- Research recommends several legal reforms to preserve groundwater in Southwest [223d]
- Artificial heterostructure shows tunable photovoltaic effect for next-generation solar cells [223d]
- Norway spruce trees produce a mixture of substances as protection against insects and fungal infestation [223d]
- Affordable laser could be mass-produced for use in self-driving cars and fiber optics [223d]
- Two-step system makes plastic from carbon dioxide, water and electricity [223d]
- More pathways that previously thought can lead to optical topological insulators [223d]
- Warmer spots within fields have more blooms and more bees, researchers discover [223d]
- Metal-organic frameworks with metallic conductivity pave new paths for electronics and energy storage [223d]
- A century of seasonal forecast improvement for Western Pacific Subtropical High driven by Indo-Pacific ocean [223d]
- 'Baths, wine, and sex make life worth living': How ancient Romans used public baths to relax, work out and socialize [223d]
- Creature culture: What animal behavior can teach us about saving nature [223d]
- When scientists share their failures, the public trusts them more [223d]
- Deep-sea mining could harm remote ocean ecosystems [223d]
- World's soft coral diversity retains signature of an ancient, vanished sea [223d]
- High explosives in slow motion: Freezing molecules in place shows chemical reactions [223d]
- Fruit fly study reveals a gene's hidden ability to keep regrowth on the right track [223d]
- North Atlantic's volcanic secrets: It's about being thin [223d]
- An instrument to be launched into space will reveal ionic details of the heliosphere [223d]
- New research identifies potential source populations of invasive red alga threatening Hawaii's protected coral reefs [223d]
- Exosome therapy offers a promising new approach to sensorineural hearing loss [223d]
- Surprising versatility of boron nitride nanotubes displayed in fusion of art and science [223d]
- Epithelial cells reveal novel mechanism to ease tissue crowding without cell loss [223d]
- Researchers discover how caffeine could slow cellular aging [223d]
- Impact-resistant material mimics mantis shrimp exoskeleton for improved protection [223d]
- Droughts can reduce the caloric value of flower nectar by up to 95%, study finds [223d]
- Brains over bots: Why toddlers still beat AI at learning language [223d]
- Study reveals the surprising and twisty path our ancestors took to develop an upright stance [223d]
- New viruses discovered in bat kidneys in Yunnan province [223d]
- An evolutionary trade-off has limited how fish catch their prey [223d]
- Scientists use gene editing to correct harmful mitochondrial mutations in human cells [223d]
- The Vera C. Rubin Observatory will help astronomers investigate dark matter, continuing the legacy of its namesake [223d]
- Diversifying the special education teacher workforce could benefit US schools [223d]
- Quantum precision reached in modeling molten salt behavior [223d]
- A troubling paradox: Irrigation boosts child nutrition but worsens water scarcity in already stressed regions [223d]
- 3D modeling method quantifies light-shading impact of freshwater microalgae [223d]
- Hidden hunting strategies of leopard seals reveal their impact on Antarctic ecosystems [223d]
- The war won't end Iran's nuclear program—it will drive it underground, following North Korea's model [223d]
- Most tree species face serious climate threat even under modest warming, study reveals [223d]
- Brazil records 62% jump in area burned by forest fires: monitor [223d]
- Drone footage captured orcas crafting tools out of kelp—and using them for grooming [223d]
- Ancient temple ruins discovered in Andes shed light on lost society [223d]
- Sharks freeze when you turn them upside down—and there's no good reason why [223d]
- Observations of binary system V455 Car suggest a possible third companion [223d]
- Researchers confirm fundamental conservation laws at the quantum level [223d]
- Model tackles key obstacle to efficient plastic recycling at molecular and reactor scales [223d]
- It's time to face an uncomfortable truth: Maybe our pampered pets would be better off without us [223d]
- Work, wages and apprenticeships: Sifting for clues about the lives of girls in ancient Egypt [223d]
- Overconfident conspiracy theorists: Many unaware their beliefs are on the fringe [223d]
- 'It feels like I am being forced to harm a child': Research shows how teachers are suffering moral injury [223d]
- A carbon levy on global shipping promises to slash emissions—what that means for Australia's biggest export [223d]
- Elemental discovery: Researchers find new oxidation state for rare earth element [223d]
- Light-powered enzymes create valuable chiral molecules from plant-based building blocks [223d]
- Why are Europeans protesting against mass tourism? An expert explains [223d]
- Improving scientific research papers: Researcher outlines top ten pitfalls and how to avoid them [223d]
- Oscillating electric field helps explain why the sun is so good at evaporating water [223d]
- Turning water pollution into power: Electrified membrane and molecule combo transforms nitrate into ammonia [223d]
- Q&A: Why is politically motivated violence on the rise in the US? [223d]
- Ocean crisis demands a new kind of science, say researchers [223d]
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