The Brutalist Report - science
- How campus climate affects students' attitudes to people of different religions [71d]
- To tackle e-waste, teach kids to be responsible consumers [71d]
- Predator was a precursor of the crocodile—and although it lived before the early dinosaurs, it looked just like one [71d]
- Q&A: The future of corals and what X-rays can tell us [71d]
- Rudeness is hurting auditors' ability to protect the public—here's how [71d]
- The hidden danger of lunar micrometeoroid storms [71d]
- Tutankhamun was decapitated 100 years ago. Why the excavation is a great shame instead of a triumph [71d]
- Yes, there is an AI investment bubble. Here are three scenarios for how it could end [71d]
- Fossil fuel CO₂ emissions hit record high in 2025 [71d]
- Climate change and rising sea levels to worsen urban health risks in Mumbai [71d]
- Diverse particles form identical geometric patterns when confined, model reveals [71d]
- Plants balance adaptability in skin cells with stability in sex cells, study reveals [71d]
- How climate change brings wildlife to the yard [71d]
- Digitizing the layers of Rome [71d]
- Earth's largest modern crater discovered in Southern China [71d]
- Impostor syndrome in higher ed teachers: Balancing authenticity with professionalism [71d]
- Rainfall and temperature shape mosquito fauna in Atlantic Forest bromeliads, including malaria vectors [71d]
- Gene editing produces plants that are indigestible to pests [71d]
- AI helps identify genomic 'time capsule' that distinguishes species [71d]
- Hourly weather data show shifting freeze and heat stress periods across US [71d]
- Solar storms delay the launch of Blue Origin's big new rocket with Mars orbiters for NASA [71d]
- Solar storms bring colorful northern lights to unexpected places [71d]
- Evidence of ancient underground water reveals Mars may have stayed habitable longer than believed [71d]
- Turning the gut microbiome into a longevity factory [71d]
- Imaging reveals bacterial symbionts in the ovaries of tiny, aquatic crustaceans [71d]
- Young adults say they're happy with their friendships, but many still feel disconnected [71d]
- Snail genome duplication offers look at evolution in transition [72d]
- Randomness reveals hidden order in the plant world [72d]
- Higher methane emissions from warmer lakes and reservoirs may exacerbate worst-case climate scenario [72d]
- First graphene-based solar cells used to power temperature sensors [72d]
- Red lactate biosensor opens the door for simultaneous monitoring of neuronal metabolism and activity [72d]
- Significant share of Arctic Ocean's dissolved carbon comes from land, study finds [72d]
- Hidden Arctic leaks: Natural seepage of oil and gas uncovered off Northeast Greenland [72d]
- Mass shootings spur local voter turnout but don't sway presidential vote choices, study finds [72d]
- Bacteriophage characterization provides platform for rational design [72d]
- Surprising numbers of childfree people emerge in developing countries, defying expectations [72d]
- High rates of antibiotic-resistant bacteria found in raw milk [72d]
- Unique shape of star's explosion revealed just a day after detection [72d]
- Beyond Matrigel: An engineered hydrogel for 3D stem cell culture [72d]
- Exploring smart nanomaterials that detect and treat traumatic brain injuries simultaneously [72d]
- What is time? Rather than something that 'flows,' a philosopher suggests time is a psychological projection [72d]
- Stepwise regression predicts Arctic sea-ice extent with high accuracy [72d]
- Sunscreen plus bleach: The surprising chemistry behind stubborn red laundry stains [72d]
- What did video kill? Study shows engagement-optimized algorithms may reinforce existing beliefs [72d]
- Gut microbes pass down behavioral traits in mice offspring independent of genes [72d]
- Ultrafast light-driven electron slide discovered [72d]
- 'AIdeology' research coins a radical new description of AI and how it is shaping societal beliefs [72d]
- Ultrafast electron diffraction captures atomic layers twisting in response to light [72d]
- 'Switchbody' turns enzyme activity on with antibody–antigen binding [72d]
- How stressors shape life in rivers [72d]
- How the market for international students puts pressure on universities' academic freedom [72d]
- Want to make America healthy again? Stop fueling climate change [72d]
- Apocalyptic images of melting glaciers and sinking islands won't help anyone imagine a better future [72d]
- String theory: Scientists are trying new ways to verify the idea that could unite all of physics [72d]
- 75% of Kilimanjaro's natural plants have been wiped out, and climate change isn't the biggest threat [72d]
Previous Day