The Brutalist Report - science
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- No new articles in the Past 12 Hours.
- Examining threats to monetary sovereignty in the digital era [52d]
- Smoke caused by seasonal fires shrouds northern Thailand [52d]
- Extreme rain on snow is testing aging dams across Michigan and Wisconsin—this is the future in a warming world [52d]
- Climate change means more landslides in NZ—but new tech can help reduce the risk [52d]
- New bioreactor turns stem cells into an immune-cell factory, producing 40 million human macrophages per week [52d]
- DNA damage just got more complicated: A long-missed weak spot emerges when light and oxygen strike [52d]
- Milky Way's 'little cousins' may hold clues about infant universe [52d]
- Retrospective genre bias can misread art; AI helps recover original context [52d]
- Moon dust could stop being a nuisance and start reshaping how humans may build beyond Earth [52d]
- Ancient African topography remotely modulated the South Asian summer monsoon millions of years ago, study finds [52d]
- These 'good' viruses hold up a booming industry—AI just found a faster way to track them [52d]
- Giant octopuses may have ruled the oceans 100 million years ago [52d]
- Life's earliest proteins may have folded into complex shapes with far fewer amino acids [52d]
- Efficient degradation of short-chain PFAS achieved with new method [52d]
- We think norms spread by imitation, but one deceptively simple rule tells a more human story [52d]
- AI accelerators deliver accurate models for challenging quantum chemistry calculations [52d]
- AI automates quantum dot voltage tuning for scaling up quantum computing [52d]
- How a sinking lithospheric root raised Mongolia's Hangay Mountains [52d]
- Study shows a widely used antifungal drug works only when its target enzyme is active [52d]
- Reeds boost mosquito spread in rivers and ponds [52d]
- Divergent moral values could make groups more accepting of norm-breaking behavior [52d]
- Inside the skull of a Devonian fish from Gondwana, revealed by neutron imaging [52d]
- Robotic fish prototype cuts aquaculture stress while inspecting nets and water [52d]
- A huge tectonic boundary shook the ground where dinosaurs once stood [52d]
- AI model designs new antibiotic for staph infections after exploring 46 billion compounds [52d]
- Women in science: Global study finds presence without power [52d]
- Room to move: Neutron scattering shows how proteins behave in crowded environments [52d]
- Atomic-level snapshots reveal how a key copper enzyme powers nature's chemistry [52d]
- Rye mulch stabilizes vegetable yields—clover living mulch can significantly reduce yields [52d]
- E. coli editing technique expands into a universal toolkit for rewriting bacterial DNA [52d]
- Tiny songbird crosses Sahara by flying night after night [52d]
- Q&A: Nature plays role in national security [52d]
- Riding the quantum wave: Quasiparticles reveal a magneto-optical transport phenomenon [52d]
- Common soil fungus could cut pesticide use while helping tomatoes grow stronger [52d]
- Political views may influence trust in smart technologies, research finds [52d]
- Why more gut and soil microbes could make ecosystems easier to predict [52d]
- Apple byproducts could power vehicles and feed livestock [52d]
- From the Pampas to Patagonia, DNA reveals South America's human history [52d]
- Legal categories for animals still divide—and limit—animal rights [52d]
- Climate and competition alone cannot explain Neanderthal extinction, study finds [52d]
- What we lose when AI does our shopping [52d]
- What if humans could regrow tissue? New study moves science closer [52d]
- Do polysaccharide-degrading enzymes also help build polysaccharides? [52d]
- Brazil unearths a bizarre beaked reptile with a trans-Atlantic prehistoric link [52d]
- Molecular chains unlock atomically precise nanoribbons for next-generation electronics [52d]
- Mozambique 'sky island' expeditions found four new species of chameleon that are already at risk from forest loss [53d]
- Machine learning helps detect roars from lion collars without recording actual audio [53d]
- What wild honey from the Philippine jungle reveals about biodiversity [53d]
- How earthquakes stop: Near-fault records uncover overlooked phase [53d]
- More than 600,000 seabirds killed in single marine heat wave [53d]
- Archaeological digs in Amazon provide clues about Indigenous inhabitants before colonization [53d]
- Only some kinds of job losses cause voters to elect strong leaders, study finds [53d]
- Why groups slowly stop working well together, even when conditions are good [53d]
- What's that swirly pattern? It's a moiré, and it has potential power [53d]
- 3I/ATLAS contains 30 times more semi-heavy water than comets in our solar system [53d]
- The science of coziness: A textiles expert explains feather down, bamboo, polyester duvets [53d]
- Scraped from ancient Roman toilets, these crusted remains expose a pathogen found far earlier than expected [53d]
- Amazon River plume: Where microalgae go carnivorous to win [53d]
- Is your cat or dog overweight? Why simply feeding less doesn't always help [53d]
- Chernobyl at 40: The lies, the loss and why we can't let go [53d]
- Quantum chips could scale faster with new spin-qubit readout that reduces sensors and wiring [53d]
- This flower's toxic traits hold clues for safer drugs [53d]
- Did NASA's Curiosity rover find signs of ancient life on Mars? An astrobiologist explains how we determine 'life' [53d]
- Climate finance may lower conflict risk in 85 developing countries, analysis suggests [53d]
- Mysterious gas clouds near Milky Way's black hole now have a likely source [53d]
- Black grouse eye test reveals best flags to protect birds from fatal cables [53d]
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