The Brutalist Report - science
- No new articles in the Past 12 Hours.
- Early humans may have walked from Turkey to mainland Europe, research suggests [130d]
- Fly nerve cells that sense limb movement are turned off during active motion, study shows [130d]
- A grue jay? Rare hybrid bird identified in Texas [130d]
- NASA's Deep Space Communications demo exceeds project expectations [130d]
- Warming climate—not overgrazing—is biggest threat to rangelands, study suggests [130d]
- The role of the microbiome in the successful transplantation of seagrass meadows [130d]
- Polyploid plants maintain several distinct flower types through ancient genetic architecture, researchers discover [130d]
- What nations around the world can learn from Ukraine [130d]
- Bird flu outbreak in house cats: High-risk but survival is possible [130d]
- Galaxies reveal hidden maps of dark matter in the early universe [130d]
- Organic beekeeping can be even more profitable than conventional methods [130d]
- Clownfish and anemones are disappearing due to heat waves [130d]
- How harnessing the 'selfish gene' could control harmful insect populations [130d]
- Community Notes helps reduce the virality of false information on X, study finds [130d]
- Turning apple waste into profit and protein [130d]
- Novel catalyst design could make green hydrogen production more efficient and durable [130d]
- Copper alloy catalysts' surface changes mapped during CO₂ conversion reactions [130d]
- Public confidence in U.S. health agencies slides, fueled by declines among Democrats [130d]
- Chloride-resistant Ru nanocatalysts developed for sustainable hydrogen production from seawater [130d]
- Biodiversity needs more than just flower strips, researchers say [130d]
- Etruscan chamber tombs made accessible in digital portal [130d]
- Investigating age limits for social media and restrictions on addictive functions [130d]
- Fighting antibiotic resistance: Surface coating that kills germs can be reactivated using light [130d]
- Financial markets may be more prone to sharp swings than traditional theory suggests [130d]
- Regulatory loopholes, endangered wild salmon and suffering farmed salmon [130d]
- Researchers determine that tea can grow in lunar soil [130d]
- New flood maps and data aim to protect Texas communities [130d]
- Horses' dietary adaptability could be key in forest fire prevention [130d]
- Meet the microbes: What a warming wetland reveals about Earth's carbon future [130d]
- A major shift in the US landscape: 'Wild' disturbances are overtaking human-directed changes [130d]
- 'Quantum squeezing' a nanoscale particle for the first time [130d]
- 'Like talking on the telephone': Quantum computing engineers get atoms chatting long distance [130d]
- Gender, language and income biases limit contributions to scientific, English-language journals [130d]
- Partnership with Kenya's Turkana community helps scientists discover genes involved in adaptation to desert living [130d]
- Genomic evolution of major malaria-transmitting mosquito species uncovered [130d]
- Brazil faces surge in mosquito-borne disease as climate change and urbanization intensify [130d]
- Using only genomics and a one-time tree count, a new model can accurately predict a forest's future [130d]
- Brewery makes new beer from yeast launched in rocket [130d]
- Millennial pink, gen Z yellow, brat green… Tell me your favorite colors, and I'll guess your generation [130d]
- Primordial black hole's final burst may solve neutrino mystery [130d]
- Researchers develop colorized X-ray imaging for clearer material and tissue analysis [130d]
- Carbon credits have little to no effect on making companies greener, study reveals [130d]
- Computational method cuts through the noise to bring clarity to single-cell analysis [130d]
- Court rulings increasingly demand scientific certainty—but the case of titanium dioxide shows that's not always possible [130d]
- Stones have been 'overfished' from the sea. Here's how Denmark's rocky reefs are being restored [130d]
- New Picasso portrait unveiled at Paris auction house [130d]
- Tracking bigscale pomfret could expose key links in deep-sea food webs [130d]
- Quantifying the economic cost of climate change for Europe's forests [130d]
- Shape-shifting collisions offer new tool for studying early matter produced in Big Bang's aftermath [130d]
- Physicists create new electrically controlled silicon-based quantum device [130d]
- Mixing tree species does not always make forests more drought-resilient, study finds [130d]
- For birds, flocks promise safety, especially if you're faster than your neighbor [130d]
- Children's best interests should anchor Canada's approach to their online privacy [130d]
- A walk across Alaska's Arctic sea ice brings to life the losses that appear in climate data [130d]
- Tomorrow's quantum computers could use sound, not light [130d]
- Either too little or too much: Report finds world's water cycles are getting more erratic [130d]
- How an astronaut calculates risk [130d]
- Droughts sync up across India's major rivers as the climate changes, 800 years of streamflow records suggest [130d]
- The climate policies that EU citizens like (and those they don't) [130d]
- Hubble sees white dwarf eating piece of Pluto-like object [130d]
- Climate inequity in natural flood management solutions [130d]
- New agamid lizard species discovered in semi-arid shrublands of China [130d]
- 3D LiDAR technology captures morphology and rock art of La Pileta Cave [130d]
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