The Brutalist Report - science
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- Imperfect underground processes help filter wastewater in Florida Keys [315d]
- New study illuminates how diatoms thrive in—and light up—the Southern Ocean [315d]
- Genetic study of Caribbean hamlets questions traditional definitions of species [315d]
- It's not just how many, it's when: People judge a potential partner's sexual history by timing, not total number [315d]
- Scientists uncover 75,000-year-old Arctic animal remains in Norwegian cave [315d]
- Marking 13 years on Mars, NASA's Curiosity picks up new skills [315d]
- Scientists capture real-time melting of 2D skyrmion lattices using magnetic fields [315d]
- Job opportunities are more important to refugees from Ukraine than social benefits, says study [315d]
- Storm Floris: The weather is rarely this windy in August, which makes it more dangerous [315d]
- Two spacecraft fly precisely in line to imitate a solar eclipse, capture a stunning image and test new technology [315d]
- Organized scientific fraud is growing at an alarming rate, study uncovers [315d]
- New mega RNA virus may hold the key to mass oyster die-offs [315d]
- Midwestern butterfly count: Big data yields bad news and clues [315d]
- Tracing brain chemistry across humanity's family tree [315d]
- The Soviet Union's secret tsunami [315d]
- Beijing issues new storm warning after deadly floods [315d]
- Pacific algae invade Algeria beaches, pushing humans and fish away [315d]
- Assisted by sniffer dogs and DNA sequencing, researchers discover three new truffle species [315d]
- Exceptional Nordic heat wave stumps tourists seeking shade [315d]
- Quantum framework offers new approach to analyzing complex network data [315d]
- Ancient trilobite limbs reveal unique walking and burrowing abilities in prehistoric seas [315d]
- Platinum-calcium alloy nanoparticles replace platinum, achieving both efficiency and durability in fuel cells [315d]
- Fossilized reindeer tooth reveals glacial-era fauna in ancient Iberian Peninsula [315d]
- Innovative super-resolution imaging method for gentle live-cell imaging developed [315d]
- Unlocking sweetness: New 'loose' state explains how taste buds sense sugar [315d]
- Biodiversity matters in every forest, but even more in wetter ones [315d]
- Packed particles power up: Physicists discover particles that accelerate when crowded [315d]
- Nature livestreams can build real human ties [315d]
- Analysis of more than a century's worth of political speeches challenges theory about how linguistic usage evolves [315d]
- Megabase-scale precision genome editing achieved in eukaryotic cells [315d]
- Ultrathin metallic films show tunable, directional charge flow using light at room temperature [315d]
- Circular chemistry approach can turn carbon dioxide into valuable fuels and chemicals [315d]
- Anti-corruption measures drive tax compliance, research shows [315d]
- Crop monitoring system utilizes IoT, AI and other tech to optimize yields, lower costs [315d]
- Hubble surveys supernova-rich spiral [315d]
- Atom-at-a-time technique sheds light on chemistry at the bottom of the periodic table [315d]
- Topological AI enables interpretable inverse design of catalytic active sites [315d]
- For the NFL, authenticity can't be a trick play to Gen Z [315d]
- Arctic rivers deliver less vital nitrogen as climate change alters water chemistry [315d]
- Digital tools reshape truck drivers' well-being, balancing support and surveillance [315d]
- Sustainable management of refrigerants could be a powerful climate solution [315d]
- Meet 'lite intermediate black holes,' the supermassive black hole's smaller, much more mysterious cousin [315d]
- Survivors' voices 80 years after Hiroshima and Nagasaki sound a warning and a call to action [315d]
- National parks are key conservation areas for wildlife and natural resources [315d]
- Previously unreported 'plant destroyers' detected in Minnesota [315d]
- Gaussian processes provide a new path toward quantum machine learning [315d]
- PBS accounts for nearly half of first graders' most frequently watched educational TV and video programs [315d]
- The man-made marvels off Western Australia's coast [315d]
- Color-changing sensors can monitor health in both houseplants and crops, helping small farms respond to stress [315d]
- Automated atomic force microscopy reveals expanded view of bacterial biofilms [315d]
- Ancient alliance between woody plants and microbes has potential to protect precious peatlands [315d]
- Scientists produce quantum entanglement-like results without entangled particles in new experiment [315d]
- Five ingenious things trees do that human designers can learn from [315d]
- Tariffs can lead to a more circular economy, says researcher [315d]
- Low-temperature process boosts water-splitting catalyst performance sixfold [315d]
- Ionic-electronic photodetector brings in-sensor vision closer to reality [315d]
- Global benchmarking competition finds shoreline models are ready for real-world coastal planning [315d]
- Gigantic, meat-eating dinosaurs didn't all have strong bites, analysis shows [315d]
- Discovery of sea star wasting disease cause sheds light on kelp forest collapse and recovery [315d]
- Velociraptorine fossil with unusually strong hands suggests a new predatory niche [315d]
- Climate change melts nearly 25% of glaciers on pristine sub-Antarctic island [315d]
- What we don't talk about when we talk about missing people [315d]
- China's meteoric rise into space [315d]
- 'Go woke, go broke' is no longer true—socially aware capitalism is the future of corporate responsibility [315d]
- Communities near South Africa's Kruger National Park prefer wildlife-friendly ways to earn a living over killing animals [315d]
- Endemic anoa and babirusa show surprising resilience on small islands [315d]
- Theories on dark matter's origins point to 'mirror world' and universe's edge [315d]
- Is Earth orbit doomed to be a billionaire's playground? [315d]
- Giant, free-floating planets may form their own planetary systems [315d]
- Gold to green: Direct seeding transforms sand mine rehabilitation in southeast Queensland [315d]
- New measurement of free neutron lifetime achieves world-record precision [315d]
- Programmable 2D nanochannels achieve brain-like memory [315d]
- A new wave in disaster financing: Parametric insurance for tsunami damage [315d]
- Cells have a second DNA repair toolbox for difficult cases [315d]
- The moon is useless, so let's preserve it [315d]
- Researchers call for greater attention to social impact and social justice in preventing crime [315d]
- NASA's Europa clipper radar instrument proves itself at Mars [315d]
- NASA-ESA sea level mission could help hurricane forecasts [315d]
- Sustainability risks to vegetable oils investigated [315d]
- Predicting mountain accident risks with deep learning and pre-climb data [315d]
- Optimized cycle system recovers waste heat from fusion reactor [315d]
- Road pollution 'stressing' ocean life with complex chemical cocktails, new study finds [315d]
- Expedition reveals 13 shipwrecks from WWII battles off Guadalcanal [315d]
- Visual cues boost positive perception of wood scents in indoor environments [315d]
- The global race to space isn't just about big countries [315d]
- Astronomers observe a giant outburst of X-ray binary RX J0440.9+4431 [315d]
- Scientists design superdiamonds with theoretically predicted hexagonal crystal structure [315d]
- Study finds gaps in books on consent education for children [315d]
- Feasibility of chasing 58 km/s interstellar visitor examined by researchers [315d]
- Deep learning advances imaging mass spectrometry with virtual histological detail [315d]
- New tarantula species so feisty that males may have evolved record-long genitalia to survive mating [315d]
- Minneapolis air quality ranked among the world's worst on August 2 [315d]
- After 10th air quality alert, Michigan official urges Canada to do more about wildfires [315d]
- Findings show the Northern Territory's vital water source is drying—and it can be seen from space [315d]
- Crypto mogul flies to space aboard latest Blue Origin flight [315d]
- High levels of E.coli found at Lake Tahoe beach after sewage leak [315d]
- Ahead of the 2028 Olympics, Los Angeles launches a program to expand shade across the city [315d]
- New long-necked marine reptile species discovered in Germany's famous Jurassic fossil beds [315d]
- Research aims to resolve coastal conflict between oysters and mangroves, aiding restoration efforts [315d]
- Rwanda bees being wiped out by pesticides [315d]
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