The Brutalist Report - science
- No new articles in the last 24 hours.
- Mind over metal: Staying wary of metal-related toxicities for pets [1d]
- Death of the front yard: The quiet change sweeping Sydney suburbs [1d]
- A water solution for drought‑prone South Africa: We designed systems to replenish aquifers [1d]
- Bird flu risk to Danish cattle: New tool can warn farmers before infection spreads [1d]
- Moral metrics: Are corporate algorithms becoming our new moral authorities? [1d]
- Why the gender wealth gap is still so stubborn, and what it means for women's well-being [1d]
- Workplace nature breaks may cut stress, study finds [1d]
- NASA's Artemis missions promise a return to the moon—but when? [1d]
- How birds are spreading plastic pollution [1d]
- Magnetic fields guide lab-grown blood vessels into precise patterns for drug testing [1d]
- Newly identified disease of corn and sorghum may be mistaken for iron deficiency [1d]
- Clearing the nanoscale bottleneck holding back next-gen electronics [1d]
- Project Hail Mary is packed with hard science. An astrophysicist breaks it down [1d]
- Engineered nanoparticles show enhanced intrinsic luminescence for biomedical imaging and cancer treatment [1d]
- Ultra-thin MoSe₂ grating traps infrared light in a 40-nanometer layer [1d]
- Eye-tracking reveals the brain commits to one syntax before a sentence is clear [1d]
- H5N1 in marine mammals is spreading: Research tallies over 50,000 seals and sea lions killed along South America's coast [1d]
- Invasive grasses may be turning British Columbia's burn scars into the next wildfire [1d]
- A new strategy for talent recruitment involves hiring from the 'tip of the funnel' [1d]
- Molecular enhancements help plants light up when they're under attack [1d]
- Durum wheat lines combine freezing tolerance with high pasta quality [1d]
- Audit managers' work-life balance suffered during COVID [1d]
- Light-activated medicines may cut side effects: How a switchable beta blocker works [1d]
- An AI-guided gene-editing tool for more precise and safer DNA correction [1d]
- Fluorescent dye that works in superacidic conditions expands possibilities for imaging in extreme environments [1d]
- Milkweed evolves 'mind-blowing' tactic to fight monarchs [1d]
- Pompeii's battle scars linked to an ancient 'machine gun' [1d]
- How a tryptophan-rich allosteric communication network helps activate a major drug target receptor [1d]
- Air pollution to rise over Europe in coming days: EU agency [1d]
- Earthquake scientists reveal how overplowing weakens soil at experimental farm [1d]
- Monte Verde fieldwork resets age of famous South American archaeological site [1d]
- How an RNA-binding protein detects and responds to non-optimal codon usage in human cells [1d]
- Humans and animals have the same preference in mating calls, citizen science experiment finds [1d]
- How our planet's history was shaped when the Earth moved [1d]
- Old-growth forests store a lot more carbon than managed forests, study finds [1d]
- 'Miracle': Europe reconnects with lost spacecraft [1d]
- Study uncovers mineral 'sink' that reduced phosphorus in early oceans, potentially delaying Earth's oxygen rise [1d]
- Microbial warfare helps bacteria evolve [1d]
- Changing leafcutter ants' food reshapes their microbial gardens, scientists find [1d]
- AI can sway voter behavior—EU regulations fall short, study reveals [1d]
- No exotic physics needed: A new formation mechanism of skyrmions inside magnets [1d]
- JUICE is planning to do science on Jupiter's 'minor' moons too [1d]
- Gravitational waves leave imprints on light emitted by atoms, theoretical study predicts [1d]
- The moon's going to get crowded. We should protect our heritage on it while we still can [1d]
- 'Mini earthquakes' turn tiny chips into radio signal powerhouses [1d]
- Ancient brines helped build Idaho's Silver Valley and Cobalt belt [1d]
- A multi-lane highway for light: Topology helps build more robust photonic networks [1d]
- Potential Strait of Hormuz blockade could disrupt global supply chains, study finds [1d]
- Carefully controlled atoms make renewables more viable for plastics and fuels production [1d]
- Mosquitoes may hold the key to saving endangered Australian wildlife [1d]
- The discovery of a buried delta on Mars could boost the search for life [2d]
- The best places to look for alien life: Scientists identify 45 Earth-like worlds to explore for a 'Project Hail Mary' [2d]
- DESI maps C-19, an extremely metal-poor Milky Way stellar stream [2d]
- Cyclone Narelle: 'Compact,' dangerous and unusually predictable [2d]
- The Yamna reused sacred spaces in the north Pontic Steppe, study suggests [2d]
- Nanodiamonds and beyond: Designing carbon materials with AI at exascale [2d]
- Building a better, more precise droplet [2d]
- Stories, not shopping lists: Narrative dating profiles draw more interest, experiments show [2d]
- Researchers link carbon fiber weakening in aircraft to total moisture content [2d]
- Sawdust waste could become fire-safe interiors with a composite that can be recycled [2d]
- Myth defanged: Baby rattlesnake bites aren't more dangerous than bites from adult rattlesnakes [2d]
- Medieval chess promoted racial harmony and mutual respect, say historians [2d]
- Fossil X-ray reveals new species of baby dino named for iconic Korean cartoon [2d]
- Legal jargon increases guilty verdicts, reduces trust in judicial system, study finds [2d]
- High-resolution atlas shows how thirsty plants hold out during drought [2d]
- Mystery fish deaths in Papua New Guinea prompt health warning [2d]
- World Happiness Report highlights social media's negative impact, ranks Finland as happiest country [2d]
- Changing shower and toilet habits could help close England's five billion-liter water gap, research finds [2d]
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