The Brutalist Report - science
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- NZ's climate policies are no longer enough to keep warming at 1.5°C—here's what needs to happen [71d]
- Being a ladies' man comes at a price for alpha male baboons [71d]
- El Niño drought reveals survival advantage in monkeys with robust stress response [71d]
- PUNCH spacecraft make final pit stop before launch [71d]
- Aftershock analysis challenges world's deepest earthquake claim [71d]
- Research team develops more holistic way to monitor lobster industry [71d]
- Bright comet's tail dazzles in images from spacecraft [71d]
- New research uncovers exotic electron crystal in graphene [71d]
- Overlooking a low-hanging fruit in climate mitigation: Biochar has been underestimated, say researchers [71d]
- Rethinking capitalism: Can it adapt to the Anthropocene's demands? [71d]
- Tropical-extratropical interactions induce the end of the rainy (baiu) season in Japan: Study [71d]
- Wildlife camera surveys in Vietnam reveal the conservation importance of habitat transition zones [71d]
- Microdroplet generator enhances single-cell analytical technique for mammalian cells [71d]
- Antimony's bonding characteristics offer insights into phase change materials [71d]
- Black kids and families are forced to overcome marked disparities in early care and education settings [71d]
- Black immigrants attract white residents to neighborhoods, research suggests [71d]
- The Vera C. Rubin Observatory will detect millions of exploding stars [71d]
- New software package drives deeper understanding of trait evolution [71d]
- Platform ecosystems and organizational capabilities boost competitiveness in volatile markets [71d]
- Scientists detect chirping cosmic waves in an unexpected part of space [71d]
- Sarajevo among world's most polluted cities, again [71d]
- The secret 'sex lives' of bacteria: Study challenges old ideas about how species form [71d]
- Study finds that Earth's small asteroid visitor is likely a chunk of moon rock [71d]
- More than 100 years of data suggest men are growing taller and heavier at twice the rate of women [71d]
- Civil organizing persisted during Syrian civil war, finds study [71d]
- The UK's international commitments on climate and nature could soon become law, and better protect the environment [71d]
- Informal mining persists in South Africa despite police crackdowns [71d]
- Extreme heat, flooding, wildfires: Colorado's formerly incarcerated people on the hazards they faced behind bars [71d]
- To save Australia's animals, scientists must count how many are left. But what if they're getting it wrong? [71d]
- Scientists reveal new defensive strategy of seeds in Fagaceae species [71d]
- Q&A: How do you keep your dog safe in the snow and cold? [71d]
- Suez Canal blockage cost shipping company $89 million, study finds [71d]
- We're turning waste bread crusts into nutritious food with ancient Asian fermentation [71d]
- Silver nanoparticles in packaging can contaminate dry foods, testing shows [71d]
- Romanian fossils show hominins in Europe 500,000 years earlier than thought [71d]
- Establishing a permanent lunar presence will depend on ingenuity and the moon's own resources, researchers say [71d]
- Earth is bombarded with rocks from space—but who gets to keep these ultimate antiques? [71d]
- Bioluminescent cell imaging upgrade makes it easier to track many targets simultaneously [71d]
- Life satisfaction scale proves effective across 65 nations, study finds [71d]
- Broken promises are why some international students turn to seeking asylum [71d]
- Nationwide patterns of severe events provide crucial data for hazard response and mitigation [71d]
- Anti-climate action groups tend to arise in countries with stronger climate change efforts, study suggests [71d]
- Float like a jellyfish: New coral mobility mechanisms uncovered [71d]
- Sleeping on beaches and staying social: How Australians kept cool in heat waves before modern technology [71d]
- History under the floorboards: Decoding the diets of institutionalized women in 19th century Sydney [71d]
- Lobbying in 'forever chemicals' industry is rife across Europe—the inside story of our investigation [71d]
- AI in education: What those buzzwords mean [71d]
- How Instagram and TikTok are changing young people's view of nature [71d]
- Africa without borders could help the continent prosper. What's getting in the way? [71d]
- The rise of firefighters-for-hire exposes the inequality of climate-driven disasters [71d]
- New report shows social media giants obstruct independent research for political online safety [71d]
- Objectivity, independent media and news avoidance: The terms you need to know to understand news today [71d]
- How the oil industry and growing political divides turned climate change into a partisan issue [71d]
- Dolphins use a 'fat taste' system to get their mother's milk, study reveals [71d]
- Study debunks myths about mayoral partisanship and crime policy [71d]
- Single women are happier than single men, researchers find [71d]
- From soot particle filters to renewable fuels: Examining carbon nanoparticle oxidation [71d]
- Philanthropy provides $30B annually for science and health research, funding that tends to stay local [71d]
- AI helps scientists detect top pollutants threatening biodiversity in UK's lakes [71d]
- AI enables innovation in glacier modeling and offers simulation of last Alpine glaciation [71d]
- Human use of fire has produced an era of uncontrolled burning: Welcome to the Pyrocene [71d]
- How Canadian cities could be leaders in the fight against waste [71d]
- Plants more likely to be 'eavesdroppers' than altruists when tapping into underground networks, study finds [71d]
- Model shows evolution had many optimal outcomes to choose from [71d]
- Proposed solution could bring DNA-nanoparticles motors up to speed with motor proteins [71d]
- Researchers report the first-ever total synthesis of a promising mushroom-derived compound [71d]
- 'Buzz me in:' Bees wearing itty bitty QR codes reveal hive secrets [71d]
- Offshore wind farms could cause significant ecosystem, economic and human health risks [71d]
- Final synthetic yeast chromosome completed, paving way for biotech advances [71d]
- Copper-detection tool discovers possible chelation target for lung cancer [71d]
- Scientists synthesize biodegradable nylon precursor through artificial photosynthesis [71d]
- A novel k-mer analysis tool based on next-generation sequencing for foreign DNA detection in genome-edited products [71d]
- AI in cell research: Mapping technology reveals cell dynamics in unprecedented detail [71d]
- Early humans' hunting habits reshaped scavenger communities, study suggests [71d]
- New materials could advance OLED display development [71d]
- Thawing permafrost helped trigger ancient Icelandic landslides, new research shows [71d]
- Swarm detects ocean tides' magnetic signatures [71d]
- Simulations clarify the mechanism of coupled plasma fluctuations [71d]
- Seismic study reveals ancient 'islands' deep within Earth's mantle [71d]
- Compact comb lights the way for next-gen photonics [71d]
- Rare wildlife species found in Cambodian national park [71d]
- The economy was the big issue for youth in 2024—especially for those who didn't vote [71d]
- Children born into poverty face higher risk of behavioral problems [71d]
- Astronauts set to swab the exterior of station for microbial life [71d]
- Firms use earnings guidance to mitigate complexity of environmental, social and governance disclosures [71d]
- Wild baboons fail mirror test for self-awareness, anthropologists find [71d]
- Here's what's causing the Great Salt Lake to shrink, according to study [71d]
- Suborbital flight experiments test dust particle agglomerates to study planet formation [71d]
- New electromagnetic material draws inspiration from the color-shifting chameleon [71d]
- Cownose ray uses its tail as a fine-tuned antenna, new study finds [71d]
- From classical to quantum: Reimagining the Mpemba effect at the atomic scale [71d]
- Superalloys resist wear at nearly forge-level heat using new process [71d]
- Largest study of its kind proves 'bird brain' is a misnomer [71d]
- Future-focused travel ads inspire more bookings than nostalgic campaigns, study finds [71d]
- In the hunt for new and better enzymes, AI steps to the fore [71d]
- Rediscovered fossil reveals rare bird skull from 45 million years ago [71d]
- Did the COVID-19 lockdowns really affect lunar temperatures? [71d]
- M87* observations catch the black hole's turbulent accretion flow [71d]
- Fossil footprints study is the first to track cave bears in the Iberian Peninsula [71d]
- Employee trust in AI linked to performance and adoption rates [71d]
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