The Brutalist Report - science
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- Message drift: Why things get taken out of context online and why it matters [1d]
- Pathogenic fungus transmitted by domestic cat scratches is present in wild animals [1d]
- Researchers develop a new anti-jellyfish floating buoy [1d]
- Virtual future selves improve students' planning and motivation, with gains seen after six months [1d]
- Preschoolers whose parents received coaching had fewer conduct problems, higher cognitive skills in middle school [1d]
- Butter or margarine? A food scientist describes how subtle chemical deviations can affect your baked goods [1d]
- New iron–scandium catalyst extends carbon nanotube growth at high temperatures [1d]
- Research examines how corporate workforce messaging shapes recruiting [1d]
- Where humpbacks gather near Tokyo's remote islands could reshape whale watching and conservation [1d]
- Silver nanoparticles pave the way for precise DNA cutting and joining [1d]
- Canada's 'AI for All' strategy has ambitious growth targets, but it falls short on workers and the environment [1d]
- Annual global migration has nearly tripled since 2000, reshaping where and how people move [1d]
- NASA's CloudCube pioneers miniaturized radar to study clouds, precipitation [1d]
- Global rice production has nearly doubled over 50 years despite climate change [1d]
- P53's five-hour rhythm may let resonance target gene networks on command [1d]
- Study shows gains in preschoolers' executive function with additional teacher training [1d]
- New methods make tracking individual bird species during migration possible [1d]
- Wheat root compounds suppress soil microbes, helping retain nitrogen and cut emissions [1d]
- Cosmic acceleration holds up as new analysis rebuts slowdown claim [1d]
- Antibody-guided nanoparticles target blood cancer cells in bone marrow [1d]
- Custom protein binders zero in on near-identical disease targets with unprecedented selectivity [1d]
- Degradable sensors reveal hidden soil secrets after microbes nibble on them [1d]
- Lab-created 'moon' rock could help scientists interpret lunar data and explore how water might form on the moon [1d]
- Low-copper paints matched high-copper rivals, while silicone performed best against fouling [1d]
- Novel catalyst design boosts solar-driven ammonia production under mild conditions [1d]
- Hurricane rainfall and landslide risk are on the rise in Southern California [1d]
- Global warming hit 1.37°C in 2025, with Earth accumulating heat at an accelerating rate [1d]
- Visualizing band structures in nanostructures: Extending band theory to imperfect periodic and bent systems [1d]
- Coastal land shifts reveal faster local sea level rise than expected [1d]
- New combined spore trapping and DNA sequencing technology tracks fungicide resistance in grain crops [1d]
- 'Cold insurance' for crops: Researchers unlock 'on-demand' climate resilience [1d]
- Cells have a secret power line: How the nucleus gets its own private energy supply from mitochondria [1d]
- Biopolymer beads extend fungus bioinsecticide shelf life and release [1d]
- Borneo's ferret badger is found nowhere else on Earth [1d]
- Drone surveys reveal why steep alpine channels erode so fast during debris flows [1d]
- X-rays reveal how platinum oxidizes in real time inside hydrogen devices [1d]
- Missing the forest for the trees: Conservationists emphasize the need for intact forest in coffee landscapes [1d]
- AI helps reveal large-scale quantum effects hidden in stacked atomic sheets [1d]
- Farm fields become living labs as data tools reshape crop research [1d]
- Antiviral soil compound disrupts phage infection cycle before viruses can reproduce [1d]
- Australia adds 33 spiny crayfish species to threatened list after megafires [1d]
- Archaeologists uncover 4,000-year-old evidence of siege warfare in ancient Mesopotamia [1d]
- Open-source FLIM Playground could speed reproducible analysis of complex cell images [1d]
- Algorithm visualizes how cells 'talk' to one another across tissue and time [1d]
- Gorillas can learn to trust humans even after years of poaching pressure, research shows [1d]
- How anti-CRISPR proteins promote the spread of hospital-acquired infections [2d]
- Report: ICE surges have triggered massive job losses—including among Americans [2d]
- AI model 'hears' Bryde's whale calls in seismic data from South China Sea [2d]
- Everyone wants to think they're open‑minded. Here's why most people aren't [2d]
- How ice-age sea-level falls may have turned seafloor volcanoes into ocean fertilizer [2d]
- 'Cool Routes' finds cooler walking paths with hourly forecasts and street-level shade data [2d]
- Dads today talk more freely with their teens about sex and relationships [2d]
- The Milky Way was rewired by a cataclysmic collision billions of years ago. Now it is on course for another [2d]
- How bacteria organize themselves to 'hitchhike' across large distances [2d]
- 'Black hole stars'—Webb finds strongest evidence yet [2d]
- Farmers in a national park are turning down lights at night to help wildlife. It could be good for crops too [2d]
- 'Atmospheric scrubbing' could reduce cooling effects of stratospheric aerosol injections [2d]
- DNA tetrahedrons unlock sharper cancer targeting with vitamin E tweak [2d]
- More sustainable agriculture: Recycled fertilizers could be part of the solution [2d]
- Extreme coastal flooding surges worldwide as rising seas rewrite 100-year odds [2d]
- Dead organisms have a lasting ecological legacy, new research shows [2d]
- Small optical component could change how telescopes view the sun [2d]
- Secret life of adult whitebait revealed by new research [2d]
- How biodiversity loss could raise borrowing costs and deepen debt risks worldwide [2d]
- Human evolution was messy and gradual, not an abrupt revolution, argues archaeologist [2d]
- Where not to look in the search for ET [2d]
- A meteorite impact may have once rained gold on Western Australia [2d]
- An underground detector in China unveils its first major findings about mysterious ghost particles [2d]
- Do mandatory body cameras actually reduce police brutality? [2d]
- What happens when cartoon villains have an accent? Research reveals impact on kids [2d]
- One storm pushed world's rarest great ape closer to extinction in Sumatra [2d]
- 'Basketball Mathematics' help children boost math skills without extra class time [2d]
- Demolishing homes after climate disasters can be devastating. Here's how we reused precious materials [2d]
- Odds climb for record El Niño as 75% of models predict 2.5C warming [2d]
- 80-atom boron 'buckyball' finally steps into nanotechnology's spotlight [2d]
- Greater international cooperation is needed to achieve the UN's global forest goals [2d]
- A day at the museum: How to follow kids' leads to support curiosity across generations [2d]
- Acoustic environment may explain why some bird songs outlast others [2d]
- Giant kelp's microscopic light antenna could inspire innovative climate solutions [2d]
- When men take parental leave, their careers may benefit—but women's do not [2d]
- Colonial ties may reshape 2026 World Cup odds, 1,500 simulations suggest [2d]
- Acidic nanoparticles target Parkinson's at cellular source [2d]
- Ancient genome duplications laid the foundations of complex brains, research suggests [2d]
- How Argonaute, a key protein for RNA therapeutics, becomes activated [2d]
- Tyndall's Trail of Bergs: Ice splintered off southern Patagonia glacier drifts across a growing glacial lake [2d]
- Retreating glaciers increase iceberg sightings and reshape deep-sea habitats [2d]
- Newfound 'whale necropolis' reveals 5.3 million years of seafloor life [2d]
- Deep sea an untapped 'evolutionary engine' as dataset yields 500 million unique genes [2d]
- Microbial alliances, not mitochondria alone, may have built first eukaryotic cells [2d]
- Words matter: 'Cultivated' outperforms 'lab-grown' for consumer acceptance, study finds [2d]
- Is your dog a lefty? New 'Doginburgh' test captures paw preference [2d]
- Fossil discovery shows the interaction between giant marine reptiles [2d]
- Study finds robotic mowers improve Florida lawn health while reducing maintenance [2d]
- Fragmented environmental policies risk costly failures, experts warn [2d]
- Chimpanzees react negatively to unfairness, especially when close partners are nearby [2d]
- Economist finds financial inequity distorted centuries-old Spanish water inequality [2d]
- Astronomers find a four-carbon sugar in deep space [2d]
- Radar data can help protect birds from wind turbines [2d]
- Galaxy-killing wind discovered in the early universe [2d]
- Parents helping kids enjoy math may boost achievement as much as content support [2d]
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