The Brutalist Report - science
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- Varroa risk to Tasmanian crop pollination [1d]
- How to protect your pets from New World screwworm [1d]
- The use of robots can increase productivity in SMEs, but may not boost exports [1d]
- New probe could help trace Alzheimer's-linked lipids one cell at a time [1d]
- How economic expectations and political polarization influence fertility rates and the number of marriages [1d]
- Catching hydrogen in the act: Tracking the absorption process over time [1d]
- Planting the future: Researchers put AI to work on the farm [2d]
- Why some glasses break suddenly while others deform smoothly [2d]
- Should a chatbot manage your bank account? Probably not, according to analysis [2d]
- Satellites are transforming biodiversity monitoring for global nature targets, but major gaps remain [2d]
- Slowing Atlantic current could fuel stronger California atmospheric rivers by century's end [2d]
- South African fynbos soil delivers a new species of soil bacterium [2d]
- Primordial mini-moons may explain meteorite composition [2d]
- Brown howler monkeys rest more on long, hot days and when feeding on leaves [2d]
- New deep-sea measurements show how the ocean floor forms [2d]
- Decoding of one of nature's largest enzymes reveals electron flow behind biological methane production [2d]
- Nine out of 10 Brazilian cities have experienced climate-related disasters over the past three decades [2d]
- Europe risks a pollinator crisis, researchers warn [2d]
- Indigenous peoples in the Amazon face massive cultural and ecological loss due to climate change [2d]
- Block-by-block AI maps uncover real urban air temperatures across 380 U.S. cities [2d]
- Dynamic population breeding improves turquoise killifish husbandry [2d]
- X-pinch plasma achieves radial proton acceleration for crisp imaging [2d]
- Older adults are at risk in heat waves, but it's not just age: How public systems and policies are failing them [2d]
- Scientists discover rare 'super-Jupiter' planet with 180-day long orbit [2d]
- Astronomers dig deep to find tiny dangerous space debris [2d]
- Heat-shrinking materials get cleaner production route with lower temperatures and finer particles [2d]
- The language of play: Hyenas use facial expressions and vocalizations to de-escalate [2d]
- Image: Hubble captures star-studded cluster [2d]
- New CRISPR method makes it possible to control protein production in cells [2d]
- Caddisfly silk gene evolves quickly without losing adhesive power [2d]
- How AI and digital data shape our understanding of migration [2d]
- Could geoengineering work to tamp down super El Niños? [2d]
- Manganese risk in groundwater affects 200 million people, study shows [2d]
- Fertilizers carry a hidden cost for soil's crucial microbes. Using less might pay off for farms in unexpected ways [2d]
- Maize-fed animals may have helped Maya farmers solve corn's protein deficiency [2d]
- Study shows why comfort at home is more than a temperature issue [2d]
- Astronomers build a one-stop universe data hub [2d]
- Optimizing RNA design with AI and an Ising machine: Encoding matters [2d]
- Moral framing reduces stigma around Fair Chance Hiring—legal compliance language does not, according to study [2d]
- Unraveling a long-standing solar mystery: The extreme thinness of the sun's tachocline layer [2d]
- How Fourth of July celebrations and the national political mood may shape psychedelic experiences [2d]
- How sea stars build materials that can see [2d]
- Warm temperatures disrupt spider sex-changing bacteria across generations [2d]
- Study compares machine learning models of raindrop formation [2d]
- California wolves feed heavily on cattle and their presence causes significant stress among livestock [2d]
- Beavers thrive in river estuaries along North America's northwest coast [2d]
- Nature's puncture tools reveal shape trade-offs between piercing power and strength [2d]
- Measuring what cupping therapy pulls from the skin [2d]
- Scientists find gas emissions from rocks may have contributed to ancient climate swings, mass extinctions [2d]
- International team says science alone won't save coral reefs [2d]
- Employees who feel overqualified view more work tasks as unreasonable [2d]
- Simple treatment strengthens pineapple leaf fibers for sustainable composites [2d]
- Study explores social media's role in tornado disaster communication [2d]
- Is the state of nature fair? Researchers measure how biomass is distributed in microbial communities [2d]
- What powers the Everglades? Study tracks how algae and plant matter fuel the food web [2d]
- How do World Cup crowds get synchronized so quickly? Researchers explain [2d]
- Traveling protein waves reveal how dividing cells set chromosome-splitting spindle size [2d]
- From the lab to the moon: Lunar cement alternative survives 6 months on ISS and returned stronger in some tests [2d]
- How cells keep genomic hitchhikers under control [2d]
- More than 90% of key nutrients degrading the Mar Menor lagoon come from recirculated underground flows [2d]
- Making the 'invisible' visible: How high-speed movies could change the way scientists study disease [2d]
- Nanoplastics found in Antarctic soils for first time, suggesting long-range atmospheric transport [2d]
- Turning up the heat on cancer: Manganese ferrite nanoparticles outperform rivals [2d]
- Large language model guides discovery of catalysts for clean energy tech [2d]
- Tiny 60,000-neuron ant brains reveal how parental care evolved from feeding circuits [2d]
- A hotter climate may lead to more same-sex mounting in corpse-eating beetles [2d]
- In time but out of tune: Exploring the rapid evolution of Hawaii's songless crickets [2d]
- Ocean acidification may be shrinking the brains of the world's most intelligent invertebrates [2d]
- Think that fishes and amphibians don't have necks? Think again [2d]
- Hidden jet from a 'missing-link' black hole lights up the radio sky [2d]
- Wavelength-multiplexed diffractive optical storage enables massively parallel image retrieval [2d]
- Brain in a chip: Biocomputing infrastructure raises questions for urban planning [2d]
- Romantic relationships with AI evolve in a similar way to human ones [2d]
- This rare British butterfly looks familiar, but its genome tells a very different story [2d]
- Study: Biodiversity hotspots in American West face extinction [2d]
- Social norms can accelerate or undermine climate action, new model finds [2d]
- Researchers uncover the inside story on plant organ growth [2d]
- Breathable hydrogel keeps ECG signals steady through workouts and 10 days of wear [2d]
- Space sensor could spot hidden nuclear weapons in orbit with 99% accuracy [2d]
- Ancient atmospheric oxygen found in iron ore deposits [2d]
- National study asks principals what professional learning actually works for them [2d]
- Replacement 'climate-friendly' car refrigerant linked to rising forever chemical pollution in EU [2d]
- Scavenger animals are the missing link in Australia's bird flu response. Three experts explain [2d]
- Long-theorized electron-on-helium qubit achieves strong coupling to a single microwave photon [2d]
- What's in a name? AI associates Jewish names with stereotypical traits [2d]
- Peru Amazon highway tied to 400% dengue surge within 5 kilometers of road [2d]
- Black hole collisions may follow entropy law, offering simpler remnant predictions [2d]
- Tiny Jurassic bird reveals a key step in bird evolution [2d]
- Quiet, please: Hatchery salmon raised amid noise are less likely to return to spawn [2d]
- It's been 30 years since Dolly the sheep was born—where is cloning technology now? [2d]
- Another success for Hayabusa 2 as it completes a flyby of asteroid Torifune [2d]
- JWST's 'overmassive' early black holes may not be so massive after all [2d]
- Robin study suggests fleeing isn't necessarily wildlife's first response to wildfire smoke [2d]
- Study examines Miami-Dade County resilience plans [2d]
- Social media influencers who match racial, ethnic identity of their audiences have a bigger—and unhealthy—impact [2d]
- Is the decline of newspapers taking the pressure off of corporate social responsibility programs? Research says 'yes' [2d]
- The oldest deliberately collected fossil ichthyosaur was discovered in Roman Britain around 1,800 years ago [2d]
- Hotter, drier weather could double water bills in some US cities, study finds [2d]
- Sensors, early starts: How Spain keeps working when heat hits [2d]
- Cambodia wants to bring tigers back, but should it? [2d]
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