The Brutalist Report - science
- Soil fungus forms durable hydrogels with potential for biomedical materials [151d]
- Deferred prosecution agreements in corporate crime cases show trade-offs, says research [151d]
- Renowned British chimpanzee expert Jane Goodall dies at 91 [151d]
- How different mushrooms learned the same psychedelic trick [151d]
- Study identifies key agricultural practices that threaten soil health and global food supply [151d]
- Dedicated amateur discovers supernova in remote galaxy [151d]
- Combination of quantum and classical computing supports early diagnosis of breast cancer [151d]
- Kilauea is erupting again on Hawaii's Big Island. What to know about its lava displays [151d]
- Entangled states enhance energy transfer in models of molecular systems [151d]
- Self-efficacy and test anxiety matter for mathematics performance; co-teaching less so [151d]
- Bird conservation threatened by shifting baseline syndrome [151d]
- The overlooked service that could make plans for a library in every primary school in England a reality [151d]
- Many book bans could be judging titles mainly by their covers [151d]
- Images of masculinity as factor in war: New study reveals psychological roots of violence [151d]
- Venus's clouds are 60% water, according to reanalyzed Pioneer data [151d]
- How pathogens build protein-based microcompartments to enhance their survival in the gut [151d]
- Heat-rechargeable design powers nanoscale molecular machines [151d]
- Unraveling a painful mystery: Protein plays key role in modulating pain response [151d]
- Corals might be adapting to climate change [151d]
- Global analysis assesses livestock vulnerability to climate change [151d]
- From guesswork to predictive control: Decoding metal-organic precursor chemistry [151d]
- Cryo-EM reveals how protein complexes maintain bacterial outer membrane defenses [151d]
- Energy researchers discover fraction of an electron that drives catalysis [151d]
- Four central climate components are losing stability, says study [151d]
- 'Every seed counts': Study compares drying conditions for seed rice performance [151d]
- Enzyme architecture reveals how bacteria convert toxic styrene oxide into useful chemicals [151d]
- Deep-sea sediment cores reveal major ecological turnover before warming event 56 million years ago [151d]
- Poorer students in England are more likely to miss out on studying a language for secondary education certificate [151d]
- Strengthening soy for better bioplastics [151d]
- Theoretical game model determines how pilgrimages can emerge [151d]
- Solar rain mystery solved by researchers [151d]
- How do plant hormones facilitate plant survival in extreme environments? [151d]
- Scientists discover a key role of protons and superoxide ions in the respiratory chain [151d]
- From space science to dinner plates: Reimagining the future of farming indoors [151d]
- Patchwork planets: Piecing together the early solar system [151d]
- Invasive mosquito vector species detected in surveillance traps in United Kingdom [151d]
- Tracing the evolutionary roots of why women live longer than men [151d]
- Farming's environmental footprint shrinks, but progress has been uneven across England [151d]
- Text message reminders for court appearances can reduce warrants and pretrial incarceration [151d]
- Bacteria could help fix the smoky taste of wildfire-tainted wine [151d]
- Sunlight worsens wildfire smoke pollution, study finds [151d]
- Hurricane Imelda bound for Bermuda as a Cat 2 storm [151d]
- Force field simulations can reduce cost of purification and waste treatment [151d]
- Little Red Dots frequently reveal clumpy morphologies, some of which bear hallmarks of active black holes [151d]
- AI-powered oil spill prediction system can improve emergency response accuracy by up to 25% [151d]
- Laser pulses in graphene control electrons with lightning speed and nanometer precision [151d]
- Data from dark-energy observatories indicate universe may 'end in a big crunch' at 33 billion years old [151d]
- Microplastics reduce soil fertility and boost production of a potent greenhouse gas, study shows [151d]
- Spontaneous emission behaves contrary to predictions in photonic time crystals [151d]
- Loneliness in US adults linked with amount, frequency of social media use [151d]
- How sustainable are reusable cups? New tool aims to find out [151d]
- Cereal plants absorb nanoplastics, initial lab trials suggest [151d]
- Python-based framework makes climate dynamics more approachable for students and researchers [151d]
- My voyage to explore how Marshallese sailors find their way at sea without technology [151d]
- Why the politics of cancellation never works [151d]
- Tariffs may bring a US$50 billion monthly boost to the US government. But ordinary Americans won't feel the benefit [151d]
- Dark matter detector succeeds in performing measurements with nearly no radioactive interference [151d]
- New report finds wide disparities in investments in children's earliest years across states [151d]
- Violent acts in houses of worship are rare but deadly: Here's what the data show [151d]
- Conventional anti-corruption tools often fail to address root causes—loss of US leadership could still spell trouble [151d]
- Farmers were already diversifying cereal cultivation in the early Neolithic period, study finds [151d]
- Palm trees in Africa are in decline: These botanists made a plan to do something about it [151d]
- Many US states are rethinking how students use cellphones, but digital tech still has a place in the classroom [151d]
- Dark matter and dark energy may only be a cosmic illusion [151d]
- Where financial advisors grew up influences their business ethics [151d]
- Features on asteroid visited by Lucy spacecraft given official names [151d]
- Parallel atom-photon entanglement paves way for future quantum networking [151d]
- Potential smoking gun signature of supermassive dark stars found in JWST data [151d]
- Better, faster, bio-based: Developing functional new plastic alternatives [151d]
- Innovative businesses may be less likely to be approved for credit loans [152d]
- Infrared data from the James Webb Telescope reveals more structural details of M87's black hole jet [152d]
- Jurassic reptile fossil discovery blurs the line between snake and lizard [152d]
- As global economy doubles, poverty persists and planetary damage deepens [152d]
- CATNIP for chemists: New data-driven tool broadens access to greener chemistry [152d]
- Taming singlet oxygen for improved energy storage [152d]
- When China makes a climate pledge, the world should listen [152d]
- Environmental sensors installed on Scotland's oldest steamship [152d]
- Study finds early brain health education improves lifetime earnings [152d]
- Extreme pressure pushes honeycomb crystal toward quantum spin liquid, hinting at new qubit designs [152d]
- Supercomputer simulations pierce mysteries of galactic nuclei [152d]
- DNA evidence closes gaps in global conservation databases for Amazon wildlife [152d]
- 'Expect extremes': California officials warn of severe wet–dry swings [152d]
- Australians want to spend more on space—but we don't really know where we're going [152d]
- New data shows the US dollar still dominates foreign exchange markets—despite Trump's economic chaos [152d]
- Trump primary source of US disinformation in POC media, finds study [152d]
- Rare fossil reveals ancient leeches weren't bloodsuckers [152d]
- Sierra Space Dream Chaser's NASA deal upended, 1st flight pushed to late 2026 [152d]
- Plants are incredibly sensitive—what we learned about their response system could help protect humans [152d]
- From frog saunas to butterfly puddles: Eight ways to turn your home into a wildlife refuge [152d]
- 12,000-year-old rock art marked ancient water sources in Arabia's desert [152d]
- Norms backfire, but social stigma shows promise against sports piracy [152d]
- First comprehensive review of plastic pollution in the Amazon reveals contamination poses urgent health risks [152d]
- Teams with budding researchers are more likely to drive scientific disruption, new study finds [152d]
- Is biomimicry the answer to more sustainable solutions and relationships? [152d]
- Artificial floating wetlands offer cost-effective, nature-based water treatment [152d]
- Twisted graphene reveals double-dome superconductivity controlled by electric field [152d]
- Scientists see shape memory activation in 'smart' plastic [152d]
- New AI enhances the view inside fusion energy systems [152d]
- Familiarity breeds success for fledgling companies [152d]
- Earth's crust is tearing apart off the Pacific Northwest—and that's not necessarily bad news [152d]
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