The Brutalist Report - phys
- Burning grasslands to maintain them: How does it help biodiversity? [171d]
- Burundi is losing its trees: How to break heavy charcoal use and tree clearing through climate reforms [172d]
- Examining the economic impacts of aquatic dead zones [172d]
- Honesty can strengthen romantic relationships despite potential hurt, study finds [172d]
- Study of 16 years of U.S.-Canada Free Trade Agreement finds that workers were not hurt by freer trade [172d]
- Study finds India doubled its tiger population in a decade and credits conservation efforts [172d]
- The life cycle and climate adaptability of South Africa's endemic Cape Autumn widow butterfly [172d]
- In research, ignoring female birds harms scientific understanding [172d]
- Forecasting wildfires: AI-powered tool to combat rising wildfire danger [172d]
- Nature journaling provides differing benefits to adults and youth [172d]
- Simulation aligns skyrmion dynamics with real-time experiments [172d]
- Imaging research on monoclonal antibodies sheds light on protein dynamics for biopharmaceutical development [172d]
- Ragweed's evolutionary edge: Study reveals supergenes behind invasive plant's rapid global invasion [172d]
- From Earth to space: Testing tech in lava tubes for future space exploration [172d]
- Light and temperature key to cultivation of a special microalga [172d]
- Muon spin rotation spectroscopy uncovers unique behavior and structure of a phosphorus-containing organic radical [172d]
- First steps taken toward developing interstellar lightsails [172d]
- Multi-camera system tracks dairy cows for improved health and productivity [172d]
- Light-twisting materials created from nano semiconductors could be a game-changer for optics [172d]
- Groundwater in the Arctic is delivering more carbon into the ocean than was previously known [172d]
- To improve school climate and discipline, teacher diversity and experience matter [172d]
- Polar bears are struggling to get enough to eat as sea ice dwindles due to climate change, study finds [172d]
- AI adoption in higher education: Bridging the STEM and non-STEM divide [172d]
- Climate change increases risk of successive natural hazards in the Himalayas [172d]
- Largest single-burial assemblage of beads confirmed at ancient Montelirio grave site [172d]
- Rising global temperatures linked to bird population decline in remote areas [172d]
- If we listen to how Gen Z really feel about democracy they might stop telling us they prefer authoritarianism [172d]
- How nonprofits abroad can fill gaps when the US government cuts off foreign aid [172d]
- Gen Z seeks safety above all else as the generation grows up amid constant crisis and existential threat [172d]
- Specific neurons may explain why maggots love the texture of decaying fruit [172d]
- Complex engineering of human cell lines reveals genome's unexpected resilience to structural changes [172d]
- Ancient DNA analyses bring to life the 11,000-year intertwined genomic history of sheep and humans [172d]
- How satellites and AI help fight wildfires today [172d]
- Nigeria's plastic bottle collectors turn waste into wealth: Survey sheds light on their motivation [172d]
- Swimming in the sweet spot: How marine animals save energy on long journeys [172d]
- Central India's indigenous forests are falling victim to bullets and bulldozers [172d]
- If the government wants science to have an economic impact, it has to put its money where its mouth is [172d]
- We studied more than 500 giraffe skulls from all over Africa, and confirmed there are 4 distinct species [172d]
- Carbon capture in Mediterranean soil: How farmland can trap greenhouse gases [172d]
- Meditation and mindfulness at work are welcome, but do they help avoid accountability for toxic culture? [172d]
- Argentina's president is vowing to repeal 'woke' femicide law. It could have ripple effects across Latin America [172d]
- AI monitors help Uganda tackle air pollution crisis [172d]
- A balloon mission that could explore Venus indefinitely [172d]
- New evidence confirms Indigenous languages have a common source, but how they spread remains a mystery [172d]
- Aspects of marriage counseling may hold the key to depolarizing, unifying the country [172d]
- Grafting can promote cacao production without sacrificing biodiversity [172d]
- Atoms that measure magnetic fields could lead to new quantum sensors [172d]
- Corporate transparency is a step toward a greener economy, but further change is needed [172d]
- Accepting AI judgments on moral decisions: A study on justified defection [172d]
- Generating electricity from tacky tape: Follow-up research offers improved version [172d]
- Wetlands in South Africa's Addo elephant park are in danger: What's being done to protect them? [172d]
- A scientist tracking koalas films unexpected social behavior between young males [172d]
- Even as the tide turned for fur, crocodile leather has kept selling in high-end fashion. But for how much longer? [172d]
- Can queen conch aquaculture save the species? New publication suggests limitations [172d]
- Wildfire smoke can carry toxins hundreds of kilometers, depositing 'urban grime' [172d]
- Chameleon shrimp can adapt camouflage to invasive algae species [172d]
- Researchers explore new basis for integrated all-optical logic [172d]
- Nanoparticles damage coronavirus in unexpected way, paving way for new disinfection technology [172d]
- Surprising longevity of nanoparticle paste offers hope for surgery-sparing technique [172d]
- Machine learning approach can enhance observatory's hunt for gravitational waves [172d]
- A complex task: Carbon sequestration in marshes depends on many variables [172d]
- Geospatial modeling research identifies key areas for improvement [172d]
- Bats' genetic adaptations: How they tolerate coronaviruses without becoming ill [172d]
- Accidental discovery of identical oil lenses offers insights into emulsions on fluid surfaces [172d]
- Biosensor can detect rare earth elements for more efficient resource extraction [172d]
- Bioengineering advance allows scientists to accurately predict and engineer protein metalation [172d]
- Future antibiotics face early bacterial resistance challenges, studies show [172d]
- Lead contamination in ancient Greece points to societal change [172d]
- A spintronic view of chiral molecules: Physicists verify chiral-induced spin selectivity effect [172d]
- Freshwater alga could be next superfood leaving minimal environmental impact [172d]
- Cold fronts in the rainforest: What they mean for wild animals [172d]
- Rare and mysterious cosmic explosion: Gamma-ray burst or jetted tidal disruption event? [172d]
- Video: Volunteers use sonar to find, remove cast-away crab pots [172d]
- Ice core samples show West Antarctic ice sheet survived the last interglacial event [172d]
- Sub-GeV dark matter hunt: SENSEI collaboration reports first findings [172d]
- 'Matchless' grass variety yields high seed count without need for field burning [172d]
- Bangladesh probes spate of turtle deaths [172d]
- Could gravitational waves be the key to cosmic communication? [172d]
- Bizarre features on Mars are caused by carbon dioxide geysers [172d]
- NASA's 2 stuck astronauts take their first spacewalk together [172d]
- Q&A: How to manage feedback overload [172d]
- Africa's largest human microbiome study sheds light on gut diversity and health [172d]
- Politically connected corporations received more exemptions from US tariffs on Chinese imports, study finds [172d]
- New light-tuned chemical tools control processes in living cells [172d]
- Researchers make appeal to the public to help determine why UK harbor seals are in steep decline [172d]
- Animal footpads inspire a polymer that sticks to ice [172d]
- Global warming offers mixed blessings for ancient ocean predators, paleobiologists suggest [172d]
- Optimism motivates people to save for future despite present challenges, study suggests [172d]
- Borrowing nature's blueprint: Scientists replicate bone marrow [172d]
- Ready for 156 Space Coast launches this year, Space Force targets bottlenecks [172d]
- Bird flu has likely killed hundreds of birds in Massachusetts: 'Virus is widespread in the state' [172d]
- Stunning conjunction of Venus, crescent moon will be visible above Colorado [172d]
- Ultra-massive white dwarf reveals 19 pulsation modes, a new record [172d]
- NEON experiment shares results from first direct search for light dark matter [172d]
- US test scores remain below pre-COVID, performance gap widens [172d]
- Newly spotted asteroid has a tiny chance of hitting Earth in 2032 [172d]
- 3D-printed nanopillars mimic brain environment to promote neuron growth [172d]
- Future of UK peatlands under threat due to climate change [172d]
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