The Brutalist Report - science
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- New tool maps public land with potential for hundreds of thousands of affordable homes in British Columbia [12d]
- LSST begins full operations with key contributions from Japanese researchers and engineers [12d]
- Huge, specially designed heat pump saves a Norwegian agricultural cooperative millions [12d]
- Sun-powered sponges may generate 11% of tropical coral reef productivity [12d]
- How extreme weather impacts white stork survival in Bulgaria [12d]
- Earliest Americans specialized in megafauna hunting from Alaska to South America, analysis of 50 sites reveals [12d]
- New star activity catalog could sharpen hunt for habitable worlds [12d]
- Hidden for decades, hospital superbug built resistance in waves, peaking in the mid‑2000s [12d]
- Over the past 15 years, Brazil has seen a more than 200% increase in non-native mollusk species [12d]
- Cosmic dust could play key role in cracking long-standing mystery of solar corona heating [12d]
- 'Stop the war!': The paradox of 'pressure petitions' [12d]
- Cutting emissions more, removing carbon less could save 33,000 U.S. lives yearly [12d]
- Unlocking the 'black box' of carbon materials: Study reveals origins of defect peaks [12d]
- Fish in a polluted Mexican river may mate with the wrong species, leading to hybrid offspring [12d]
- Scientists devise new method for tracing environmental PFAS contamination better [12d]
- Hidden toll: Interpersonal violence drives most of the world's annual cost of up to US $34 trillion [12d]
- Lake Chad supports 2.48 million waterbirds, emerging as one of Africa's top wetland refuges [12d]
- Tree size, not age, may speed habitat recovery for endangered Indiana bats [12d]
- Nautilus array to track missing exoplanet atmospheres [12d]
- Why Facebook, video calls and artificial intelligence matter for age-friendly communities [12d]
- Superworms could be the future of skeleton cleaning [12d]
- Acceptor molecule upconverts low-energy green light to high-energy purple with high efficiency [12d]
- Residential environment linked to subjective well-being through life-domain satisfaction [12d]
- Scrolling for science: How a Twitter post discovered a new wasp in Fukuoka, Japan [12d]
- England breaks record for warmest June: Met Office [12d]
- Breathing under pressure: Addressing recurrent laryngeal neuropathy in horses [12d]
- Portugal braces for high temperatures in new heat wave [12d]
- New research shows why startups may be learning the wrong lessons from customers [12d]
- Ancient gum disease may have helped reshape jaws before human brains expanded [12d]
- Oppressive heat broils US during World Cup, July Fourth [12d]
- Baker's yeast shows potential in treatment of persistent fungal infection [12d]
- How mating competition, age and sex shape immune systems in wild bats [12d]
- TESS just found a planet in a new way—and more may be hiding in its eight years of data [12d]
- When parasites stop having sex, they may become less picky about their hosts [12d]
- Walkable, greener neighborhoods linked to better physical and mental health across the U.S. [12d]
- Beyond 3-D: Data scientists introduce novel AI tool to interpret complex biological data [12d]
- Nanotubes and nanosheets boost fast energy storage [12d]
- A new CRASH clock measures the chance of satellite collisions, and it's ticking down fast [12d]
- DNA-based nanoswitch can flip in milliseconds and stay in one state for days without continuous forcing [12d]
- One amino acid may signal the 'point of no return' in dying leaves [12d]
- Why turning off screens is so hard for children—and four tips to make it easier [12d]
- Researchers discover novel SRV2 envelope protein for efficient CAR immune cell production [12d]
- AI-generated debate replies outscore real politicians on authenticity and coherence [13d]
- Evolutionary origins of 'junk DNA' may provide new clues to cancer [13d]
- Taking advantage of an enzyme mutation to help soybeans fight a billion-dollar pest [13d]
- Primate brains might have evolved to 'catch up' with larger bodies, but then kept growing [13d]
- How giant earthquakes can form at fault planes where theory says they should not [13d]
- Can AI plan for heat emergencies better than simple rules? It depends [13d]
- Meditation and speaking in tongues: The surprising similarities between two spiritual practices [13d]
- Single-atom catalyst turns lignin into valuable chemicals with near-complete conversion [13d]
- Crystal-design principle reveals how competing molecular forces control structure, color and phase transitions [13d]
- Venezuela earthquakes highlight the limits of early warning systems [13d]
- World's first synthetic cell with a complete life cycle could revolutionize biological engineering [13d]
- New bioelectronic microdevices enable remote cell stimulation using ultrasound [13d]
- The universe is less uniform than we thought—cosmology may need a radical rethink [13d]
- Mobile learning output expanded rapidly from 2017 to 2026, analysis of 2,500 papers shows [13d]
- Climate resilience of brown bears over 175,000 years revealed in 3D analyses of their jaws [13d]
- 13,000 tons of space junk clutters Earth orbit. Here's how it could be cleaned up [13d]
- Prickly starfish and urchins are decimating Australia's reefs. But we could find ways to protect them [13d]
- XMM-Newton and Chandra help revise distance to Milky Way's outer spiral arms [13d]
- Tooth fossil analysis suggests 'brawn before bite' in early Asian mammals [13d]
- 'I hate you!': What little kids really mean when they say this [13d]
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