The Brutalist Report - science
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- From the air to the field: How nitrogen fertilizer helps feed the world—and why supply chains matter [51d]
- COVID-19 in mink farm reveals early lung damage [51d]
- Coordination gaps slow progress on Baltic Sea 'ghost gear' [51d]
- Spatiotemporal light pulses could secure optical communication by masking data [51d]
- Burning plus tree retention boosts natural forest regrowth in Finland after 11 years [51d]
- Economic hardship tied to increased violence across California [51d]
- How microplastics hurt the species that keep our coasts healthy [51d]
- Unlocking the value of biodiversity in the UK and Ireland [51d]
- Quantum-inspired algorithm solves 268 million-site quasicrystal simulation in a heartbeat [51d]
- Gravity follows Newton and Einstein's rules, even at cosmic scales [51d]
- Crowd flow measurements reveal hidden slowdowns and standstills in dense public spaces [51d]
- Next-generation CT scanner reveal new details inside 2,300-year-old Egyptian mummy remains [51d]
- 'Interstellar glaciers': NASA's SPHEREx maps vast galactic ice regions [51d]
- The giants of the reef: New citizen science project races to document centennial corals [51d]
- Shakespeare's 'missing' London house mapped with new discovery [51d]
- Marine sponge bacterium enzyme reveals a two-part route to make terpenoids [51d]
- AI tool maps stable metal oxide catalysts without coding, speeding clean energy searches [51d]
- Electrons crack open organic solar cells, exposing their hidden 3D molecular architecture in a single microscope [51d]
- Planets need more water to support life than scientists previously thought [51d]
- Plants' photosynthetic pathway type and rates of Rubisco dark inhibition may be linked [51d]
- Machine learning tool pinpoints optimal locations for tree planting, offering a powerful tool for climate mitigation [51d]
- Stress-triggered protein clusters reveal how cells sort damaged cargo [51d]
- Astronomers crack a decades-old mystery, catching gas morphing into planet-building disks around newborn stars [51d]
- Dark matter could explain the earliest supermassive black holes [51d]
- Cut off from making fat, parasitic wasps lose pheromones, fail to form eggs and cannot reproduce [51d]
- Hurricane-resilient coastal forests in the Northeastern US may be nearing their limits, project indicates [51d]
- Jelly-like plankton fuel bigger, faster-growing reef fish across the Indo-Pacific [51d]
- As polar ice changes, so do the rules governing it [51d]
- Scientists capture superconductivity's 'dancing pairs' for first time, revealing missing pieces in a decades-old theory [51d]
- Why gay men can feel more attractive when they travel [51d]
- How a hidden receptor switch could open new paths for cancer and neurological treatments [51d]
- Bolivian mummy rewrites scarlet fever's past, suggesting killer bacterium circulated centuries before colonization [51d]
- Color test 'sniffs out' dangerous staph strains fast [51d]
- Machine learning accelerates analysis of fusion materials [51d]
- Quantum simulations reveal spin transport in 1D materials [51d]
- Emerging in Alaska, dominant H5N1 strain spread continent-wide through migratory birds [51d]
- Ancient charcoal sheds new light on how early humans fueled their lives [51d]
- Watching junk food videos may help dieters resist snacks, experiments show [51d]
- Ancient seabird guano reveals how climate change may shape future populations [51d]
- Why this single-chip LED advance could shrink AR glasses and boost quantum links [51d]
- Hawai'i's songbirds are raiding neighbors' nests, and the losses could deepen a growing survival crisis [51d]
- Scientists solve 100-year-old mystery behind rubber that powers modern life [51d]
- Exploring the moon's shadowy craters with nuclear-powered rovers [51d]
- Alien life may hide in plain sight: Statistical patterns across exoplanets move beyond traditional biosignatures [51d]
- Self-propulsion or slow diffusion: How bacteria, cells, and colloids respond to stimuli [51d]
- Museum drawer fossil reveals 200-million-year-old crocodile relative with a powerful bite [51d]
- The Zhamanshin impact event was likely much more destructive than thought [51d]
- Internet use stays high after 50, but skills and education shape the gap [51d]
- Ancient Maya droughts may have been fueled by Earth's own climate swings [51d]
- Researchers synthesize photosynthetic molecule found in bacteria [51d]
- 'Bathtub ring' hints at ancient Martian ocean [51d]
- Soil species face extinction risk as one in five assessed are threatened [51d]
- Autonomy key to happiness, study finds [51d]
- Dark volcanic ash has visibly reshaped Martian surface since 1976 [51d]
- Waiting to enter primary school may improve educational outcomes in low-income countries, study shows [51d]
- Unearthed mega-structure hints at communal rule in Romania 6,000 years ago [51d]
- One battered skull exposes a lost killer from dinosaur dawn and a vanished bloodline [51d]
- A 3D map of 47 million galaxies is redefining our view of the universe [51d]
- How to tell if your dog is in pain (and what to do if they are) [51d]
- Pill bugs don't just use the minerals they eat—they rebuild them inside their bodies [51d]
- Can naked mole rats peacefully hand over power? [51d]
- Referee decisions in soccer frequently overturned following VAR-assisted review: No external influences found [51d]
- Astronomers reveal always-changing multi-planet system [51d]
- The beloved emperor penguin and Antarctic fur seal are now officially endangered. Here's what can be done [51d]
- Any color you like: Scientists create 'any wavelength' lasers in tiny circuits for light [51d]
- The universe's most powerful telescope [51d]
- Critically endangered orangutan born at Madrid zoo [51d]
- New tools rescue old art at Madrid's Prado museum [51d]
- Reading the moon's buried past [51d]
- Blended satellite data reveal what drove methane's 2019–2024 rise worldwide [51d]
- CRISPR variant selectively targets tumor DNA [51d]
- Earth's microbes may hide a near-universal plastic-eating arsenal, with 600,000 proteins poised to attack waste [51d]
- Why Greek yogurt went viral and what it says about how we shop [51d]
- Rapid melatonin test can help astronauts and others easily monitor their biological rhythm [51d]
- Q&A: Great company culture is more than creating a nice place to work [51d]
- How Latino business owners are navigating growth, AI and inflation [51d]
- Wasps move in on ant-plant partnership, disrupting a 10‑million‑year mutualism [51d]
- Sweet lifeline for wildlife after bushfires ravage their habitat [51d]
- 4,000-year-old clay tablets inscribed with magical spells… and beer tabs [51d]
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