The Brutalist Report - science
- Trauma is a major barrier to refugees' employment, study finds [1d]
- Image: Winter grips Hokkaido, Japan [1d]
- Economists and environmental scientists see the world differently—here's why that matters [1d]
- Draining wetlands produces substantial emissions in the Canadian Prairies [1d]
- Genetic analysis reveals an alternative explanation for the Jomon migration to Japan [1d]
- What it really means to love your job—and when that love can become a liability [1d]
- Bushbabies reclassified as 'near threatened.' Scientists share how to protect these adorable primates [2d]
- Atrocities take place in democratic nations as well as autocratic ones—our database has logged them all [2d]
- Researchers measure Puijo lichens and microbes for canopy nitrous oxide uptake [2d]
- Sea level rise worries most Hawaiʻi residents, survey finds [2d]
- Expedition to investigate coastal Kelvin waves and marine heat waves in the tropical Atlantic [2d]
- How 1.5 million km of undersea internet cables can double up as an earthquake and tsunami warning system [2d]
- Will more police and surveillance prevent the next school tragedy? [2d]
- Gotland hunter-gatherer graves hint at how Stone Age families organized [2d]
- Cognitive biases of talent scouts can undermine sports teams' success [2d]
- A bacterium's built-in compass, explained: Single-cell magnetometry confirms Earth-field alignment [2d]
- Scientists build successful 'cloud in a box' [2d]
- Rhododendron-derived drugs now made by bacteria [2d]
- Beyond the beaches, Wellington's catastrophic sewage spill could be bad news for coastal ecosystems [2d]
- Porous liquids could capture methane from biogas and release it on demand [2d]
- Exploring electron microscopy and AI as key players for identifying pollen grains [2d]
- Moving biopesticides through plants opens new opportunities [2d]
- AI model delivers detailed 15-day Mediterranean Sea predictions in seconds [2d]
- Strong Field Spin-Boson model revises how intense lasers drive electrons in dense matter [2d]
- Horses with over 30 minutes of REM sleep show better persistence in learning tasks [2d]
- Why failing generative AI keeps rolling in government: Nine arguments sustain momentum [2d]
- Relatedness and positive attitudes drive trust in AI and its developers [2d]
- Greenland entrepreneur gambles on leafy greens [2d]
- Climate change widened Valencia's 2024 extreme rain footprint by 55%, study finds [2d]
- Astronomers may have just found one of the missing links in galaxy evolution [2d]
- Study finds reduction of aerosols and cloud cover drives increase in solar radiation in Europe [2d]
- Off-the-shelf components enable deployment-ready quantum entanglement source [2d]
- Satellite imagery and AI reveal development needs hidden by national data [2d]
- Renewable biological catalyst carries the potential to transform wastewater into phosphorus resource [2d]
- Extreme heat and drought at flowering could put future wheat harvests at risk, study suggests [2d]
- Rhythm during sex in bonobos provides new insights into the evolution of communication [2d]
- Nitrogen pollution is rising: What a new global map means for forest carbon [2d]
- Silenced no more: Why U.S. online reviews turned longer and more negative [2d]
- Scientists raise 300,000 surfclams offshore, proving open-ocean aquaculture can work [2d]
- Prehistoric fossil poses puzzles in shark research [2d]
- State censorship shapes how Chinese chatbots respond to sensitive political topics, study suggests [2d]
- Q&A: What is Lunar New Year? [2d]
- World's smallest QR code, read via electron microscope, earns Guinness recognition [2d]
- Otters as ocean doctors: How a 40-year watch on Brazil's coasts reveals hidden threats to estuaries [2d]
- Science on the double: How an AI-powered 'digital twin' accelerates chemistry and materials discoveries [2d]
- Seal pup communication is more similar to that of humans than previously thought, researcher finds [2d]
- Ban or guide? Teens say parents and schools should listen, not restrict [2d]
- The radical world of red-winged fairy wrens [2d]
- A smart fluid that can be reconfigured with temperature [2d]
- AI system TongGeometry generates and solves olympiad-level geometry problems [2d]
- Navigation apps can help level the playing field for ride-hail drivers [2d]
- Specially engineered crystal reveals magnetism with quantum potential [2d]
- Longer roots for drought? How an edited protein could reshape crop resilience [2d]
- Physicists observe polaron formation for the first time [2d]
- From cells to companies: Study shows how diversity scales within complex systems [2d]
- Tuned nanocrystals speed light-driven reactions by matching molecular vibrations [2d]
- Early study connects dogs' cancer survival with their gut microbiome composition [2d]
- JWST spots most distant jellyfish galaxy to date [2d]
- Not all humans are 'super-scary' to wildlife, animal behavior study suggests [2d]
- To aficionados, fungi are freaky, mystical and overlooked. They're helping scientists learn more [2d]
- Intensive grazing and soil fertility favor the growth of non-native plants, drylands study finds [2d]
- Can seagrass survive extreme heat? Exploring how different species withstand elevated water temperatures [2d]
- Beyond 'survival' of fittest: Evolution works in teams [2d]
- Plasma rotation simulations could help fusion reactors survive decades of use [2d]
- New amplifier design promises less noise, more gain for quantum computers [2d]
- Honey bees navigate more precisely than previously thought [2d]
- Is dark energy actually evolving? [2d]
- The ice on Greenland is acting strangely: Scientists believe they finally know why [2d]
- Scientists discover recent tectonic activity on the moon [2d]
- UAE extends Mars probe mission until 2028 [2d]
- China has slashed air pollution, but the 'war' isn't over [2d]
- Massive ceramics haul from a 14th-century shipwreck reveals Singapore's trading past [2d]
- Why Triceratops has such a big nose: The first comprehensive hypothesis on soft tissue in the dinosaur [2d]
- Climbing behaviors of tree-dwelling mammals unlock insights on early primate evolution [2d]
- Northern Europe's radiator: Volcanic eruptions in the past may have pushed ocean currents toward collapse [2d]
- Family matters: How growing up together molds us [2d]
- Record-breaking Antarctic drill reveals 23 million years of climate history [2d]
- Brain responses to wildlife images can forecast online engagement—and help conservation messaging [2d]
- Double white dwarf system detected in a nearby stellar cluster [2d]
- Proton's width measured to unparalleled precision, narrowing the path to new physics [2d]
- Growing evidence that freshwater wildlife is impacted by microplastics [2d]
- Nanoengineers realize an on-chip excitonic hyperlens [2d]
- Video: This powder could rescue antibiotics [2d]
- Extra school roles can boost teachers' job satisfaction when balanced within existing hours, easing teacher shortages [2d]
- Is social media addictive? How it keeps you clicking and the harms it can cause [2d]
- Play reduces stress and lifts well-being—and adults benefit as much as children do [2d]
- Genomics: Decoding the blueprints for Australia's biodiversity [2d]
- New research calls for 'heat literacy' in Australia [2d]
- Warming winters are disrupting the hidden world of fungi—the result can shift mountain grasslands to scrub [2d]
- Preserving fading history in the Florida Keys [2d]
- What's Minnesota's largest raptor? Hint: it might not be the bald eagle [2d]
- A yeast enzyme helps human cells overcome mitochondrial defects [2d]
- Elusive lithium-ion anode binder finally seen with pioneering technique [2d]
- Tropical forests generate rainfall worth billions, study finds [2d]
- Quantum sensor research advances the pursuit of dark matter [2d]
- AI model learns yeast DNA 'language' to boost protein drug output [2d]
- Bacterial strain from 5,000-year-old cave ice shows resistance against 10 modern antibiotics [2d]
Previous Day