The Brutalist Report - science
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- How nanomedicine gets inside your cells and treats you from the inside out [2d]
- Study finds park design affects cooling differently by day and night [2d]
- Examining the impact of sanctioned elites on authoritarian realignment [2d]
- Warmer streams may be draining river food webs by sending more carbon into the air [2d]
- Doomscrolling or connecting? Study reveals social media's complex effect on loneliness [2d]
- Machine learning detects more than 60,000 earthquakes during 2025 Santorini sequence [2d]
- Nanobody repairs misfolded CFTR inside cells, boosting function in cystic fibrosis [2d]
- Out of sight, but not out of trouble: Groundwater contamination in NZ reveals a legacy of human pressure [2d]
- Antioxidant glutathione discovered to play a key role in proper protein folding [2d]
- Two bacteria join forces to turn chemical signals into electricity, opening up low-cost sensing options [2d]
- Want to restore oyster reefs? Find a site where they don't wash away or become buried under the sand [2d]
- Shrink, remove and modify: Team successfully 'trims' wheat chromosomes [2d]
- Indonesia's fire crisis comes into focus as high-resolution satellite maps expose 5.62 million hectares affected [2d]
- Platinum-free catalyst splits hydrogen from water for energy, running 1,000 hours at industry standards [2d]
- Quantum-informed AI improves long-term turbulence forecasts while using far less memory [2d]
- Parrots are not just mimicking words—they use proper names like humans to identify individuals [2d]
- One of the world's rarest mouses is adapting to climate change [2d]
- Medicine's next leap: Delivering gene therapies exactly where they're needed [2d]
- Mining waste product could help store carbon emissions, study suggests [2d]
- Volunteers discover rare space weather events using their ears [2d]
- Ocean bottom seismometers could improve earthquake warning times in Pacific Northwest [2d]
- Smart irrigation rules could cut water use and raise farm profits [2d]
- AI-powered tool could speed treatments for antibiotic-resistant bacteria by pinpointing potent peptides [2d]
- First archaeological case of cleft lip identified in China reveals inclusive care in Qing dynasty community [2d]
- Q&A: Will agentic AI replace human scientists? [2d]
- After the guns fall silent, violence follows children home across Africa for years to come [2d]
- Researchers directly observe muonic molecules critical to muon catalyzed fusion [2d]
- Key gene enables tomato seed germination under high-temperature conditions [2d]
- Saving coral reefs will require ruthless selection over generations to beat future heat waves [2d]
- UN office's recovery plan advances flood relief efforts in Pakistan [2d]
- As modern crops turn 'lazy' underground, old sorghum may hold key to future food security [2d]
- Mosquitoes reach Iceland for the first time as the Arctic heats up [2d]
- The Colorado River disappeared from the geological record for 5 million years: Scientists now know where it went [2d]
- DNA cracks nutmeg's hidden past, revealing a South Moluccas origin and a prehuman journey north [2d]
- 'Cruelly hot': Japan devises new term for heat wave days [2d]
- If birds are fancy dancers, are they smarter, too? [2d]
- How whaling evolved from its Basque origins into a vast global business [2d]
- AI helps instructors give better feedback but can't replace them, trial suggests [2d]
- ALMA and JWST investigate giant disk galaxy's formation and evolution [2d]
- Kinship interlocks: How the rich stay rich [2d]
- Understanding community effects of Asian immigrants' US housing purchases [2d]
- Human space research gets a boost from retired NASA centrifuge [2d]
- Surface-draped fiber captured plane's flight details at Nevada airfield [2d]
- Voluntarily disclosing incarceration may help job prospects, study shows [2d]
- Iron plus UV light turns alcohol into hydrogen with catalyst-like efficiency [2d]
- Catching a scramblase in the act could pave the way to improved blood disorder and cancer treatments [2d]
- Back on Earth, Artemis II crew still finding their footing [2d]
- Artemis II astronauts praise their moonship's performance, especially the heat shield [2d]
- A student-led experiment sets new limits in the search for axions [3d]
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