The Brutalist Report - science
- How can we keep livestock safe as wolves return? [118d]
- This libertarian manifesto, loved by Peter Thiel, urges a 'cognitive elite' to see selfishness as a virtue [118d]
- Simulation reveals uneven water distribution in Jupiter's turbulent atmosphere [118d]
- Diversity in forest management translates to improved biodiversity, real-world data and virtual landscapes suggest [118d]
- Sensor platform uses nanopore 'speed cameras' to pinpoint gases in complex mixtures [118d]
- The importance of data choice in effective flood insurance [118d]
- New method enables simultaneous synthesis of all 21 types of tRNA in vitro [118d]
- Researchers use nanotubes to improve blood flow in bioengineered tissues [118d]
- Mapping underground spaces—muon technology shows promise for 3D imaging of subsurface for archaeological excavations [118d]
- Terahertz spectroscopy reveals how plant leaves manage water through stomatal openings [118d]
- Understanding solute selectivity: How aquaporin 10.2 filters urea and boric acid [118d]
- Study reveals wild canids favor structured travel routes, unlike their feline counterparts [118d]
- Plastic particle mismanagement identified as key driver of environmental contamination [118d]
- Improved models of heavy ion collisions reveal new details of early universe nuclear matter [118d]
- Steel production could get a makeover: Study captures real-time iron formation at the nanoscale [118d]
- New clues in how plant microbiomes protect against bacterial speck disease [119d]
- DNA-repair pathway clears damaged gut cells and triggers tissue renewal after infection [119d]
- EU environment boss tests positive for 'toxic' forever chemicals [119d]
- The first animals on Earth may have been sea sponges, chemical fossils suggest [119d]
- New tool pinpoints proteins that regulate gene activity in living cells [119d]
- Constraining Proxima b's atmosphere, orbit and albedo with RISTRETTO [119d]
- Endangered whooping crane dies of avian flu at Wisconsin wildlife refuge [119d]
- Fiber optic cables could act as early warning system for geohazards [119d]
- Quantum error correction codes enable efficient scaling to hundreds of thousands of qubits [119d]
- How is good cholesterol made? Imaging method shows production mechanism at molecular level [119d]
- 3D bioprinting advances enable creation of artificial blood vessels with layered structures [119d]
- Foam from old mattresses and sponges can now be safely recycled without toxic chemicals [119d]
- Sharper than ever: New algorithm brings the stars into greater focus [119d]
- Skilled and low-wage employees most vulnerable to globalization, finds study [119d]
- New drug and enzyme class found to have anti-aging properties [119d]
- Yellow warbler study provides a lens for better understanding response to rapid climate change in wild species [119d]
- Alpha amino acids' stability may explain their role as early life's protein building blocks [119d]
- Cup plant outperforms silage maize as a sustainable bioenergy crop [119d]
- Zoom fatigue could be a thing of the past [119d]
- Transport will make or break Australia's new climate plan—and time is running out to fix it [119d]
- High-order analysis reveals more signs of phase-change 'turbulence' in nuclear matter [119d]
- Scientists discover 63 new young asteroid families—more than doubling the previous number [119d]
- Moon-forming disk around massive planet offers insight into how the moons of gas giants might have formed [119d]
- Ending taxes on home sales would benefit the wealthiest households most [119d]
- The eye in the sky: What Denmark's drone sightings tell us about power and fear down the years [119d]
- The ancestors of ostriches and emus were long-distance fliers. Here's how we worked this out [119d]
- A billion-dollar drug was found in Easter Island soil: What companies owe the Indigenous people they studied [119d]
- How to identify animal tracks, burrows and other signs of wildlife in your neighborhood [119d]
- Hubble captures puzzling galaxy with gas-free center and dusty ring [119d]
- Uranian moon Ariel's surface features point to a past ocean over 100 miles deep [119d]
- Experimental mapping of bacterial growth reveals evolutionary and ecological patterns [119d]
- Investigating how political campaigns use and abuse email addresses [119d]
- World's most sensitive detector tightens the net on on elusive dark matter [119d]
- Simple intervention significantly improved patent outcomes for women inventors [119d]
- Pet guardians are increasingly worried about the mental health of their dogs and cats [119d]
- X-ray technique provides a new tool for nuclear forensics investigations [119d]
- Bacterial endotoxins are high-potency, low-mass drivers of PM₂.₅ toxicity, sampling study reveals [119d]
- How generative AI is really changing education by outsourcing the production of knowledge to big tech [119d]
- 'A real physical thing': Quantum computer exhibit at O'Hare seeks to make the technology tangible [119d]
- China's coastal land development policies may outweigh climate change in future flood risks [119d]
- Cancer cells' stress shield cracked by compound that binds in one place, inhibits in another [119d]
- Scientists develop microelectrode array for monitoring neuronal activity during hibernation [119d]
- Building trust in soil carbon as a climate solution requires stronger evidence, environmental scientists warn [119d]
- The asteroid belt's slow disappearing act [119d]
- New instrument at SOAR achieves first light with observations of remarkable binary star system [119d]
- Astronomers determine new origins of double-peaked emission lines in galactic centers [119d]
- Byproduct of making fuel from ag waste boosts soil organic carbon on Iowa farm [119d]
- The speed trap: Why leaders' quick pivots can seem inauthentic [119d]
- Modeling quark star merger ejecta: Study reveals three possible outcomes [119d]
- Clues from the deep sea that an exploding star sent debris to the Earth 10 million years ago [119d]
- Electrically tunable metasurface unlocks real-time THz holography [119d]
- Why aren't companies speeding up investment? A new theory offers an answer to an economic paradox [119d]
- Citizen scientists reveal global hotspots of plastic pollution [119d]
- Overwhelming evidence of genocide against Palestinians: A legal expert unpacks the UN report on Gaza [119d]
- Black widows lure males with smell of 'cheesy feet' [119d]
- How sea star wasting disease transformed the West Coast's ecology and economy [119d]
- Bacteria attached to charcoal could help keep an infamous 'forever chemical' out of waterways [119d]
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