The Brutalist Report - science
- No new articles in the Past 12 Hours.
- 'Resilience Science Must-Knows': Report shows how decision-makers can manage global crises [80d]
- Reframing aging as evolutionary success [80d]
- Biodiversity startups attract diverse investors but raise less capital than peers [80d]
- Biologists team up with community scientists to record over 350 wild bee species in Vermont [80d]
- Picture of universe getting clearer—but much remains unknown [80d]
- Trying to find baby planets swaddled in dust [80d]
- How open science and shared data can help tackle global challenges: The Crete Declaration [80d]
- NGOs can serve communities better by listening more, researchers say [80d]
- Guidebook could help K-12 schools navigate the complex world of AI [80d]
- Golf's cruelest moment: The physics behind the 'lip out' phenomenon [80d]
- Golden oyster mushrooms cultivated, sold in Florida: Scientist urges caution [80d]
- Voting behavior in elections strongly linked to future risk of death [80d]
- KATMAP: A new way to understand and predict gene splicing [80d]
- Foxtail barley can serve as a host for fungal pathogens attacking barley [80d]
- Photoinduced non-reciprocal magnetism effectively violates Newton's third law [80d]
- Dinosaur discovery extends known range of ancient species [80d]
- Shifts in anoles' skin color signal their health and vitality, research reveals [80d]
- 480-million-year-old parasite still plagues today's shellfish [80d]
- Firework displays prompt urban birds to abandon roosts and fly erratically at night [80d]
- Global land carbon sink halved in 2024, AI model suggests [80d]
- One clock, two functions: Circadian rhythms and developmental timing may share a fundamental molecular machinery [80d]
- Ectomycorrhizal tree dominance linked to higher forest carbon storage in subtropics [80d]
- Light can reshape atom-thin semiconductors for next-generation optical devices [80d]
- AI assistant developed for every step of the scientific process [80d]
- Historical records help uncover climate impacts and future trends of hailstorms in China [80d]
- Managing ponds may help save endangered California tiger salamander [80d]
- When only the strong shells survive: Archaeology's fresh approach to turn oyster shells into tools of conservation [80d]
- How AI is challenging the credibility of some online courses [80d]
- Like sculpting from within: New technique builds advanced materials out of basic plastics [80d]
- Optimizing avalanche photodiode design for photodetection in the ultraviolet wavelength [80d]
- Scientists discover ALIX protein can prevent cell death during inflammatory response [80d]
- Singles' Day is a $150B holiday in China. Here's why '11/11' may catch on in the US [80d]
- Oklahoma tried out a test to 'woke-proof' the classroom. It was short-lived, but could still leave a mark [80d]
- Tiny, overlooked ponds in the Andes may play an outsized role in climate change [80d]
- Calcium-rich karst bedrock reshapes latitudinal pattern of forest species diversity [80d]
- AI-driven remote sensing framework can map forage cultivation potential in drylands [80d]
- Enzyme motif reveals how plastic-munching bacteria are evolving across the seven seas [80d]
- The threat of space terrorism is no longer science fiction, but we're ill-prepared to combat it [80d]
- A sticky solution for enhanced pesticide deposition [80d]
- America's teachers are being priced out of their communities. Cities are building subsidized housing to lure them back [80d]
- Simulations suggest the early universe helped black holes grow big, but not in the long run [80d]
- Cyclists may be right to run stop signs and red lights. Here's why [80d]
- Infrared sensors gain sensitivity with ultra-thin lens for fire and threat monitoring [80d]
- Using metabarcoding to detect rot-causing fungi in apples [80d]
- More than 100,000 Norwegians suffer from work-related anxiety, finds study [80d]
- Chemists provide new 'atlas' for reliable experiments with polyoxometalates [80d]
- UK govt orders poultry restrictions as avian flu spreads [80d]
- World on track to dangerous warming as emissions hit record high: UN [80d]
- Lost or leading the way? Rare birds may signal shifting migration routes [80d]
- Physicists achieve high precision in measuring strontium atoms using rubidium neighbor [80d]
- Pink sea anemone that 'builds a home' for hermit crabs discovered off Japan's deep-sea coast [80d]
- Give caterpillars a 'soft landing' under your trees. The ecosystem will thank you [80d]
- Second species of wild leeks discovered, solving long-standing debate [80d]
- Controlling next-generation energy conversion materials with simple pressure [80d]
- Genetics may influence our choice of academic field [80d]
- Triangle weaver spider's web uses spring-loaded mechanism to move faster than muscle [80d]
- Molecular dynamics simulations use atomistic force field to capture RNA folding with high accuracy [80d]
- Webb telescope spies Io's volcanic activity and sulfurous atmosphere [80d]
- Heat acts as turbo-boost for immune cells, study finds [80d]
- A space historian explores how the advent of radio astronomy led to the USSR's search for extraterrestrial life [80d]
- Rape culture is a problem for everyone. Here are three ways to tackle it [80d]
- From nail bars to firefighting foams: How chemicals are deemed safe enough or too harmful [80d]
- Rethinking the insurance industry in a warming world [80d]
- Artificial developments weaken coastal resilience. Here's how mapping them can help [80d]
- Social media can cause stress in real life. Our 'digital thermometer' helps track it [80d]
- Two ways you can conserve the water used to make your food [80d]
- Can politician tweeting strategy betray their ambitions? Scientists map congressional positioning through X engagement [80d]
- Black Sea nitrous oxide conundrum: Why most N₂O produced by microbes never reaches the surface [80d]
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