The Brutalist Report - science
- Why neurodiversity might be the hidden engine of entrepreneurial success [1d]
- Ponzi schemes and financial bubbles: Lessons from history [1d]
- Scientists discover a molecular switch that protects crops from freezing cold [1d]
- Teens discover books on social media. What will the under-16s ban do to their reading? [1d]
- Digital innovations and cultural heritage in rural towns [1d]
- Tourism is quietly rewriting women's lives in countries under strict religious rule, according to a new study [1d]
- Outdoor bouldering as a source of microplastics? First evidence from vegetation studies [1d]
- How to make sure water is safe to drink: Four practical tips [1d]
- Some words affect us more than others. It boils down to how they sound [1d]
- Europe's food ecolabels based on life cycle assessment need a common language [1d]
- Green initiatives can increase agricultural emissions but still benefit the climate [1d]
- Stories from traditional knowledge combined with archaeological work trace 2,300 km of Songlines [1d]
- Climate modeling for communities, with communities [1d]
- Prehistoric elephant footprints documented for first time in Murcia's fossil dunes [1d]
- The first alien civilization we encounter will be extremely loud [1d]
- California wildlife officials quietly shift on killing a high-profile predator [1d]
- Five family Christmas games that reveal how we think, communicate and connect [1d]
- What happens when managers don't act? New research reveals the consequences can be severe [1d]
- Wafer-scale solid-state nanopores fabricated using extreme ultraviolet lithography [1d]
- California curtails effort to find young wolves whose parents were euthanized [1d]
- Tax-avoiding firms face higher investment costs due to lack of transparency [1d]
- AI tools are being used to subject women in public life to online violence [1d]
- Support for scientific funding doesn't have to be partisan—but scientists must make the case, says new study [1d]
- China and Mongolia are battling to control massive dust storms [1d]
- Billionaire Trump nominee confirmed to lead NASA amid Moon race [1d]
- Beachy Head Woman's origin story: DNA analysis reveals she was local to southern Britain [1d]
- One and done is not enough: Study challenges traditional evolutionary research [1d]
- Q&A: Climate shifts drove carnivores' evolution from mongoose-like ancestors to diverse forms [1d]
- Soil molecular diversity spikes as microbes decompose plants, researchers discover [1d]
- Genetic teamwork may be the secret to climate-resilient plants [1d]
- Satellite data reveals new insights into sustainable groundwater usage in the Hollywood Basin [1d]
- Perseverance Mars rover ready to roll for miles in years ahead [1d]
- A 'scientific sandbox' lets researchers explore the evolution of vision systems [1d]
- An 'origami' airless wheel to explore lunar caves [1d]
- Scientists uncover how microbial consortia break down lignin [1d]
- TillerPET: An AI model for high-throughput phenotyping of rice tiller traits [1d]
- In echo of Jurassic Park, mosquitoes capture entire ecosystems in their blood meals [1d]
- Carbon-based filter removes PFAS from groundwater in field tests [1d]
- Rate of US coastal sea level rise doubled in the past century, study finds [1d]
- US congressmembers' responses on X to mass shooting events differ along party lines [1d]
- Color-superconducting quark matter may explain stability of massive neutron stars [1d]
- Study explores role of neutrophils in canine atopic dermatitis [1d]
- Shortest light pulse ever created captures ultrafast electron dynamics [1d]
- Ancient hunter-gatherer DNA may explain why some people live to 100 years or more [1d]
- Four engagement drivers determine whether Spotify users stay or leave [1d]
- Why is time going so fast and how do I slow it down? [1d]
- Ecosystem interactions shape spread of wasting disease [1d]
- 'Ouzo effect' reveals how oil droplets can resist flow and form stable patterns in liquids [1d]
- Listen to grandma—life's not a zero-sum game [1d]
- New electrochemical process turns hazardous cobalt-laden wastewater into a resource [1d]
- Scientists discover fungus that kills toxic algae threatening human health [2d]
- This genetic trick gives woodrats an evolutionary advantage against rattlesnake venom [2d]
- Quantum mechanical molecular 'fingerprints' solve machine learning mystery [2d]
- Why most exoplanets are magma worlds [2d]
- Environmental, social and governance requirements impacting agriculture, study argues [2d]
- Amplifying the beet: New tech makes for crunchier snacks [2d]
- Engineered proteins enable smartphone-based detection of specific DNA sequences [2d]
- Billionaires with $1 salaries, and other legal tax dodges the ultrawealthy use to keep their riches [2d]
- Conventional entanglement can have thousands of hidden topologies in high dimensions [2d]
- Digital detox: How to switch off without paying the price: New research [2d]
- What has—and hasn't—changed in the way news addresses sexual violence [2d]
- Where the wild things thrive: Finding and protecting nature's climate change safe havens [2d]
- Machine learning model predicts protein binding on gold nanoclusters [2d]
- Novel AI platform accelerates discovery of chemical catalysts for industry [2d]
- New analytics show US schools can adopt later start times without raising costs [2d]
- From prey to predator: How carnivores spread beneficial fungi [2d]
- Could police crackdowns actually help criminal networks? [2d]
- Model reveals tradeoffs that limit harm caused by malaria parasite [2d]
- Microgel-based antioxidant system advances biohybrid brain research [2d]
- Balkan nations offer lessons on handling cow virus sowing turmoil [2d]
- How a new diet of penguins is changing puma behavior and social lives in Patagonia [2d]
- Europe's Ariane 6 rocket puts EU navigation satellites in orbit [2d]
- Saturn's rings extend further above and below the ring plane, forming a 'halo' [2d]
- Why does lettuce go bad so quickly? Our new study has the answer [2d]
- Canada's North is warming from the ground up, and our infrastructure isn't ready [2d]
- Detailed cell map unlocks secrets of how reproductive organs form [2d]
- Gut bacteria rapidly adapt to digest starches in ultra-processed foods, study finds [2d]
- Saturn's biggest moon might not have an ocean after all [2d]
- Leave notes, play games, go shopping: How to boost your child's multilingual skills these holidays [2d]
- New fossil study illuminates the evolutionary success of frogs [2d]
- Overlooked hydrogen emissions are heating Earth and supercharging methane, research finds [2d]
- LLMs unleash AI's potential for autonomous and explainable materials discovery [2d]
- Metabolic analyses of animal fossils help scientists reconstruct million-year-old environments [2d]
- Sourdough starters: How flour choice shapes microbial communities [2d]
- School holidays privilege Christmas, and classroom strategies are needed to foster inclusion [2d]
- How cricket balls move: The science behind swing, seam and spin [2d]
- Sharks and torpedo rays wash up dead along Cape Cod: 'Very sad' [2d]
- School shootings dropped in 2025—but schools are still focusing too much on safety technology instead of prevention [2d]
- How the myth of 'aqua nullius' still guides Australia's approach to groundwater [2d]
- 3D analysis of wrist ligaments reveals locomotion clues in human ancestors [2d]
- Warmer ocean currents significantly destabilize ice sheets, driving their retreat [2d]
- Enzyme disables bacterial toxin by cleaving key chemical ring structure [2d]
- Subsystem resetting: Researchers discover a new route to control phase transitions in complex systems [2d]
- Low-temperature greenhouse gas conversion: Direct current reveals charge-driven mechanism [2d]
- Data bias reduces reliability of AI models predicting antimicrobial resistance [2d]
- Bird researchers use virtual reality to bring fieldwork experience to classroom [2d]
- California on track for lowest Lake Mead use in 75 years [2d]
- A 3D-printed Christmas tree made entirely of ice [2d]
- Decaying dark matter: Unidentified X-ray emission lines in galaxy cluster spectra may point the way [2d]
- Bronze Age DNA from Calabria reveals a distinct mountain community [2d]
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