The Brutalist Report - phys
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- Firms that read more perform better: Researchers analyze online reading habits from employees across firms worldwide [585d]
- 'The nastiest soils on Earth' are getting recognized as a bigger problem [585d]
- Creek survey uncovers bacteriophages that could combat superbugs [585d]
- Conspicuous consumption may have evolutionary roots, researchers suggest [585d]
- Bach, Mozart or jazz: Scientists provide a quantitative measure of variability in music pieces [585d]
- Earth underwent a massive, rapid melting period after the last global ice age, new study suggests [585d]
- How many additional exoplanets are in known systems? [585d]
- Sustainable hydrophobic cellulose shows potential for replacing petroleum-related products [585d]
- Decadal climate patterns reveal new insights into tropical cyclone formation and El Niño-Southern Oscillation link [585d]
- Testing thousands of RNA enzymes helps find first 'twister ribozyme' in mammals [585d]
- Text and facial expressions drive success in charitable crowdfunding [585d]
- Flow of the future: AI models tackle complex particle drag coefficients [585d]
- Burial chamber and grave goods of ancient Egyptian priestess discovered in Asyut [585d]
- What can marketers learn from the Caitlin Clark vs. Angel Reese basketball rivalry? Focus on intersectionality [585d]
- Researchers call for nuanced understanding of 'tribe' in Arab world [585d]
- Scientists find key to engineering water-responsive biopolymers [585d]
- Study identifies promising materials for fusion reactors [585d]
- Decades after global regulations, the Arctic Ocean's legacy persistent organic pollutants haven't dropped [585d]
- School burnout can be prevented with the right measures, but students' challenges must be acknowledged [585d]
- First tests of oral anthrax vaccine are successful in white-tailed deer [585d]
- Water overuse in Brazil's MATOPIBA region could mean failure to meet up to 40% of local demand for crop irrigation [585d]
- Hands-on modules enhance data science skills in environmental education [585d]
- Downward mobility from top backgrounds in the UK is even rarer than previously thought [585d]
- Survey highlights 'publish or perish' culture as key factor in research irreproducibility [586d]
- Indonesia volcano erupts again after killing nine day earlier [586d]
- Africa's cities are growing chaotically fast, but there's still time to get things right, say experts [586d]
- How Native Americans guarded their societies against tyranny [586d]
- Will the lights go out on Cuba's communist leaders? With fewer options to prop up economy, their future looks dimmer [586d]
- Smog sickness: India's capital struggles as pollution surges [586d]
- African countries shouldn't have to borrow money to fix climate damage they never caused, says economist [586d]
- Scientists shed light on an arms race between barley and a fungal pathogen [586d]
- Helping the most vulnerable stay cool in extreme heat [586d]
- Secrets and lies: Spies of the Stuart era played a dangerous game in the shadows of an unstable Europe [586d]
- How project governance helps navigate public-private 'coopetition' tensions [586d]
- Professor-turned-welder shares her experience in the trade [586d]
- Kristallnacht's legacy still haunts Hamburg, even as city rebuilds former synagogue burned in Nazi pogrom [586d]
- Study investigates the gendered focus on the Japanese language-learning boom in postcolonial Korea [586d]
- New policy aims to introduce bilingual education in South Africa [586d]
- Next-generation space materials blast off for tests on ISS [586d]
- Age-gap relationships—psychologist discusses different ideals between men and women [586d]
- New modeling of complex biological systems could offer insights into genomic data and other huge datasets [586d]
- Researcher: Beefing up Border Patrol is a bipartisan goal, but the agency has a troubled history [586d]
- Viewpoint: Carl Sagan's scientific legacy extends far beyond 'Cosmos' [586d]
- Is the election making you feel adrift and wobbly? That's 'zozobra,' and Mexican philosophers have some advice [586d]
- Cells have more mini 'organs' than once thought—these rogue organelles challenge biology's fundamentals [586d]
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