The Brutalist Report - science
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- Video: Preparing Smile for space [58d]
- Cryo-EM reveals the structural basis of functional diversity in alcohol oxidase isozymes [58d]
- How much worse could western wildfires get? New modeling changes projections [58d]
- What a powerful El Niño could mean for the US region of Appalachia [58d]
- Hidden algae diversity emerges in wheat fields across spring, summer and autumn [58d]
- Climate change drives 'emptying' of rural Bhutan [58d]
- How unequal trade with Global North leaves Latin America supplying land, labor and raw materials [58d]
- Virtual reality game about zombie ants increases players' understanding of evolution [58d]
- How location sharing apps change the ways we communicate [58d]
- Microbes for health: New way to feel 'at one' with nature [58d]
- Mapping how 'Big AI' influences AI laws and oversight [58d]
- Would a $1 rideshare fee affect wealthier or working‑class Philadelphians more? 2 Chicago studies offer some perspective [58d]
- Bioengineers condense protein engineering and testing to a single day [58d]
- Phase-contrast microtomography reveals vascular colonization of tomato roots by Fusarium oxysporum [58d]
- Careful crystallization unlocks well-ordered perovskite layers for transistors [58d]
- Brazil's reserves run on too little funding, with Amazon getting just 20% needed [58d]
- Ancient burial practices emerge from Laos' mysterious Plain of Jars [58d]
- Reconfigurable Ge-Si photodetector achieves ultrahigh-speed data transmission using low-loss packaging [58d]
- Alternative SoMe algorithms can help users form more accurate and less polarized beliefs [58d]
- MatterChat model helps AI to 'see' the language of atom-scale physics to sharpen materials predictions [58d]
- The structure of water: Entropy determines whether ions stick [58d]
- Open-source AI assistant can improve research workflow [58d]
- Mars reveals first Zwan-Wolf effect deep in its atmosphere during a solar storm [58d]
- Sea level rise is swallowing US Mid-Atlantic farmland faster than expected, study finds [58d]
- Counting the overlooked 'hidden homeless' [58d]
- A physicist's fresh look at the 'prisoner's dilemma' reveals hope for cooperation [58d]
- Elongated canopy gaps may best support the natural regeneration of oak forest [58d]
- You are what you eat: Cichlid fish reveal how food sources drive evolution of digestive system [58d]
- A newly rediscovered moth species in Florida may already be at risk [58d]
- Indian and Tibetan wolves reveal ancient lineages with unexpected genomic diversity [58d]
- From wetland sediment, scientists uncover centuries of climate chaos—and human resilience [58d]
- New research examines how misinformation threatens planetary defense and public trust [58d]
- Microneedle patch vaccine could solving one of farming's most stubborn problems [58d]
- Findings reconsider the existence of Europa's vapor plumes [58d]
- The Mediterranean Sea is capable of generating hurricanes and climate change will make them worse [58d]
- Professional chess analysis reveals faster decisions correlate with higher quality moves [58d]
- Is Earth's constant companion a stray asteroid or a chunk of the moon? [58d]
- Hubble reveals rare galaxy 100 million light-years away caught in transition [58d]
- New economics study finds that ICE activity has upended the US childcare workforce [58d]
- Ultrafast switching device unlocks low-power optical-to-electrical conversion for AI hardware [58d]
- Bizarre Venus surface formations puzzle planetary scientists [58d]
- Southern Ocean intermediate waters may hold key to Earth's carbon dioxide history [59d]
- Big AI's control of narrative and regulation poses significant threat to rule of law [59d]
- Small financial changes can have big impact on stress, study finds [59d]
- Worker bumble bees help determine which baby bee will become queen [59d]
- 370 billion crickets are farmed for food every year. Scientists have discovered they may feel pain [59d]
- Tradwives want to 'make patriarchy great again.' A sociologist explains what they're all about [59d]
- White hydrogen discovered in billion-year-old Canadian Shield rock points to potential new energy source [59d]
- Even after adopting cattle, early east African herders kept hunting and gathering for 1,000 years [59d]
- How teaching the history of science can help equip students to face polarized times [59d]
- Ancient Arctic fossils uncover three mammal species that survived months of darkness [59d]
- Neanderthals gathered shellfish using the same strategies as modern humans, study finds [59d]
- How hidden viruses wake up inside seaweed and pass on to future generations [59d]
- Cricket nuggets? Caterpillar cookies? Canadians would consider eating insects if they can't see them [59d]
- Companies are hyping AI the same way they talked up sustainability, but there are ways to fix that [59d]
- Galactic collision may have reset Milky Way disk 11 billion years ago [59d]
- Dark lunar craters could host ultrastable lasers for moon navigation [59d]
- Nondestructive DNA sampling reveals 1,300 years of secrets in historic parchments [59d]
- Smarter spending, not bigger budgets, drives premier league success, study finds [59d]
- Debunking a core chemistry concept taught in classrooms everywhere [59d]
- Study examines skills gaps, intervention priorities in energy and construction sectors during green transition [59d]
- Chemical pathway unlocks next-generation infrared III–V nanocrystals [59d]
- Teaching with food boosts preschoolers' science knowledge and vocabulary [59d]
- Eyes that photosynthesize: Scientists plant a cure for dry eye disease [59d]
- A fungal disease and climate change threaten Colorado's prized peaches [59d]
- AI-generated fake citations are flooding scientific literature across publications, scientists warn [59d]
- When we took 37 strangers into the urban bush, their loneliness began to ease [59d]
- Overfishing hits 11 of 12 Bahamian seafood staples, 73 years of catch data show [59d]
- Nature is good for business—and we now have numbers to show it [59d]
- Sea levels rising dramatically in some areas due to land subsidence [59d]
- Corn diseases cost farmers $13.8 billion from 2020 to 2023 [59d]
- Learning physics can derail some students: New research shows the best way to keep them on track [59d]
- Thoughtful solar siting can protect ag, biodiversity [59d]
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