The Brutalist Report - science
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- No new articles in the Past 12 Hours.
- Google promotes 'teacher approved' apps for kids. Here's what parents should know [2d]
- Following in the footsteps of Jane Goodall: A wildlife pathologist's story [2d]
- Public sector workers' motivation based more on work environment than personal drive, study finds [2d]
- Research helps power safe return of astronauts in historic Orion splashdown [2d]
- The olive as a laboratory: New analytical approach predicts the quality of olive oil before it is extracted [2d]
- Flies found to be effective pollinators of berry crops [2d]
- New national framework in Australia strengthens antimicrobial stewardship in animal industries [2d]
- Discovery of Addison's disease gene in dogs could help humans as well [2d]
- Q&A: How smarter forest practices could help protect British Columbia's forests from wildfire, climate stress [2d]
- Young stars dim quickly in their X-ray output, potentially benefiting orbiting planets [2d]
- Birds that put more energy into parenthood age faster and die younger, research shows [2d]
- Carbon removal project supports Maine's blue economy, broader marine health [2d]
- A simpler way to count cool roofs' climate payoff could reshape local carbon planning [2d]
- Graphene as a charge mirror: Why water droplets 'see' graphene—but don't show it [2d]
- Catching distant gamma-ray explosions with precisely aligned X-ray optics [2d]
- Mushroom slime removes up to 98.4% of microplastics from water, researchers report [2d]
- Using computed tomography to study DNA from ancient humans without destroying samples [2d]
- Virtual sunspots help AI find rare magnetic matches in vast solar archives [2d]
- Meet kungaka—'the hidden one.' This ancient lizard could be the rarest reptile in Australia [2d]
- Not so dark with Alena Tensor: Math framework could explain dark matter without invisible particles [2d]
- After 9,000 years of cultivation, rice has reached its thermal limit [2d]
- Simple rules guide how proteins assemble and evolve, study finds [2d]
- Why did the stag beetle Prosopocoilus hachijoensis lose its ability to fly? [2d]
- Ph.D. student solves persistent problem in high-entropy alloys [2d]
- Glaciers may flow into the ocean more quickly than we think [2d]
- When a key resource disappears: What wood ant networks can teach us [2d]
- AI-guided electron microscope provides unique glimpse into the world of MXenes [2d]
- Plants growing higher across the Himalaya region as climate warms [2d]
- Smart cable sharing gives quantum computers a big boost [2d]
- Saltwater is closing in on coastal groundwater, putting billions and food supplies at risk [2d]
- Webb redefines the dividing line between planets and stars [2d]
- Phospholipid asymmetry helps explain extracellular vesicle surface charge and therapeutic quality [2d]
- A silicon-compatible path toward scalable quantum systems [2d]
- Some lake bacteria survive by slashing half their genome and never looking back [2d]
- Climate warming may reduce urban vitality [2d]
- Shredded stars reveal how black holes ignite trillion-sun flares [2d]
- Picky methane-consuming microorganisms prefer carbon monoxide, opening the door to more greenhouse gas release [2d]
- Hidden damage in stony corals revealed using 3D imaging and AI [2d]
- Andean volcanic eruptions during the Late Miocene likely drove global cooling [2d]
- Discarded wood helps produce hydrogen peroxide with more than 95% selectivity [2d]
- A built-in 'hairpin' mechanism in CRISPR-Cas13 prevents rogue RNAs [2d]
- Fluorescent technique reveals hidden scale of microfiber pollution from our clothes [2d]
- Limonene enables highly efficient asymmetric synthesis via the Mitsunobu reaction [2d]
- Integration of two genes: A valuable strategy for developing virus-resistant tomatoes [2d]
- Torsion balances set strongest direct limits yet on ultralight dark matter [2d]
- Mirror-positioning method could make quantum gravity tests possible [2d]
- Industries most exposed to AI are not only seeing productivity gains but jobs and wage growth too [2d]
- This nasal spray rewinds the aging brain, restoring memory and reversing inflammation in preclinical models [2d]
- Using atomic nuclei could allow scientists to read time more precisely than ever [2d]
- Parasites get trapped inside host cells when MIC11 is removed, exposing a crucial escape mechanism [2d]
- How debate about gender identity could undermine global efforts to protect victims of violence [2d]
- AI companions can give constant support, but distort ideas about what a relationship really is [2d]
- Island songbirds may have their own music and culture [2d]
- Ethiopia's Afar Rift provides glimpse into life and death 100,000 years ago [2d]
- Everyday sexist online language is not random, and that's the problem [2d]
- Toothy snout recasts Australia's famed Muttaburrasaurus as a picky eater [2d]
- Would you save more lives or more years of life? A global study reveals how people really think [2d]
- High school student designs low-cost teabags to remove arsenic from water and help millions [2d]
- Copper blasted into a million-degree plasma strips away 22 electrons in a flash before atoms recover [2d]
- New study calls for a 'pedagogy of joy' in higher education [2d]
- Quantum simulations tackle photon polarization flip, but today's hardware falls short [2d]
- New genetic discovery reveals why some plants are born to survive in a warming world [2d]
- A tiny predator from ancient Spain just doubled the weasel family's evolutionary timeline [2d]
- Scattered insects offer practical boost to poultry welfare, new research shows [2d]
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