The Brutalist Report - science
- College faculty are under pressure to say and do the right thing. The stress also trickles down to students [94d]
- How a new online game helps imagine life on Earth in 2100 [94d]
- AI tutor bots show promise as learning supplements [94d]
- Hunters or collectors? New evidence challenges claim Australia's First Peoples sent large animals extinct [94d]
- The history of erasing Black cemeteries in the United States [94d]
- Can AI keep students motivated, or does it do the opposite? [94d]
- More whales are getting tangled in fishing gear and shark nets [94d]
- Is it wrong to have too much money? Your answer may depend on deep-seated values and your country's economy [94d]
- Researchers use NVST high-resolution data to study chromospheric fibrils around quiescent filament [94d]
- Do more likes lead to more clicks? [94d]
- Survey: Californians don't know cannabis driving laws [94d]
- Vesicle proteomics uncover new cargo proteins and accessory factors in cell transport [94d]
- Underwater thermal vents may have given rise to the first molecular precursors of life [94d]
- Circular economy strategy could slash lithium-ion battery supply chain emissions, but global cooperation is key [94d]
- Physicists unlock secrets of stellar alchemy, yielding new insights into gold's cosmic origins [94d]
- Glowing antioxidants track ferroptosis as it unfolds inside living cells [94d]
- Planetary scientists link Jupiter's birth to Earth's formation zone [94d]
- Seaweed survey in Israel points to ecological conditions supporting growth of nutritional compounds [94d]
- Cannabis boom in South Africa and Zimbabwe is good for wealthy investors, bad for small farmers [94d]
- Some stony corals could have a chance of surviving climate change [94d]
- Using drones, AI and ducks to guide the future of wildlife conservation [94d]
- Satellites and space trash threaten ozone layer and space safety [94d]
- When a derecho strikes: Engineers build emergency management training game [94d]
- Rainforest animals are using tourist walkways, offering clues for conservation design [94d]
- Fungal secrets of a sunken ship: Advanced decay found throughout USS Cairo despite past wood preservation efforts [94d]
- EU ambiguity on Western Sahara frozen conflict is a 'glaring source' of vulnerability for Sahrawis, study shows [94d]
- New malaria drug candidate blocks protein production in resistant parasites [94d]
- Human ingenuity outpaces AI in finding new 'kissing number' bounds [94d]
- Feeding off spent battery waste, a novel bacterium signals a new method for self-sufficient battery recycling [94d]
- Magnetically guided streamer funneling star-building material into newborn system in Perseus [94d]
- They might not be giants: The genetics behind why some fish remain tiny [94d]
- How plant-fungi friendships may change in the face of warming soil and rising CO₂ levels [94d]
- Satellite data shows methane emissions are declining in part of Canada's oil patch, but more monitoring is needed [94d]
- A 'seating chart' for atoms helps locate their positions in materials [94d]
- Hidden giant granite discovered beneath West Antarctic Ice Sheet [94d]
- Radiocarbon dating of Egyptian artifacts puts Thera (Santorini) volcanic eruption prior to Pharaoh Ahmose [94d]
- Salmon use pituitary glands to 'see' when it's time to migrate, researchers discover [94d]
- Ancient DNA provides clues to intestinal parasites that plagued early Mexico [94d]
- Proper processing key to pathogen control in recycled manure solids bedding on dairy farms [94d]
- The economics of attention dominate modern-day active trading [94d]
- Scientists discover neural coding mechanism underlying odor-guided foraging decisions in mice [94d]
- Global average farm size may triple by 2100 amid rural population decline [94d]
- Explosive expansion of invasive marsh frogs found [94d]
- 3 billion-year-old white dwarf still consuming its planetary system challenges previous assumptions [94d]
- Hidden in the sun's glare, this asteroid is uncomfortably close to earth [94d]
- Q&A: Expert discusses if unintentional bias is changeable [94d]
- Cats caught coronavirus from owners during early pandemic [94d]
- A 15th-century Inca building was built for sound—researchers are working to understand why [94d]
- Light particles prefer company: Photons exhibit collective behavior only after reaching certain threshold [94d]
- Telescope hack opens a sharper view into the universe [94d]
- Roboticists reverse engineer zebrafish navigation to investigate sensorimotor processing [94d]
- A tiny chip that can help us see deeper into space [94d]
- Green chemistry method combines light and air to build key molecules for future medicines [94d]
- Giant ground sloths' fossilized teeth reveal their unique role in the prehistoric ecosystem [94d]
- Rapid method recycles nylon from fishing nets and car parts [94d]
- AI algorithm combines different satellite imagery for precise oil spill detection [94d]
- Polymer particles mimic opal's iridescence with nano-hole architecture [94d]
- Quantum theory faces 'cultural gaps' as computational limits reshape entanglement understanding [94d]
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