The Brutalist Report - science
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- Unequal taxation helped fuel the French Revolution, say economists [1d]
- Supportive supervisors lift performance for employees with disabilities, study finds [1d]
- Most of the moon's water likely remains chemically bound in its deep interior [1d]
- Typhoons mix up bacteria and biochemistry [2d]
- How redefining one word strips the Endangered Species Act's ability to protect vital habitat [2d]
- Dead stars in our cosmic backyard: Astronomers spot four white dwarfs hiding under our noses [2d]
- Hidden in Maya wall writings: A named astronomer emerges from 1,200-year-old calculations [2d]
- Climate disclosure gives Canadian companies an edge with European investors, new research shows [2d]
- Teachers are worried about students cheating with AI, but my survey suggests the deeper issue is learning [2d]
- Floating-electron catalyst withstands week in air while making ammonia under milder conditions [2d]
- Carbon storage could curb more than 90% of AI data center emissions, study finds [2d]
- Scientists uncover molecular mechanism linking water-saving irrigation to cadmium accumulation in rice [2d]
- AI-powered electronic nose can distinguish tens of thousands of odors [2d]
- Hundreds of economists say 'we must act now' on AI's economic impact and job displacement risks [2d]
- Where mainshocks strike may explain earthquake size patterns better than timing, data suggests [2d]
- Six massive landslides discovered on icy Pluto [2d]
- New imaging method reveals how electric fields reshape ferroelectric materials [2d]
- Hidden barriers keep many Californians from coast, survey reveals [2d]
- Scientists and citizens are more persuasive than government and industry in mobilizing action, study finds [2d]
- Why climate scientists need to talk more about the very worst‑case scenarios [2d]
- 'Silly sprinklers' put in reverse to further unravel decades-old physics puzzle [2d]
- New 3D thermal cloak hides objects from heat in any direction [2d]
- White-beam neutron device unlocks precise control of twisted quantum waves [2d]
- The family tree of viruses just grew, and it paves the way for a new approach to agricultural research [2d]
- Despite the growth of some AI schools like Alpha, research doesn't show that AI tutors are better than human teachers [2d]
- Melting icebergs can weaken a massive, far-off ocean current system [2d]
- Famous puzzle-solving chimps lost 20 years of life after harsh Berlin winters [2d]
- When disaster recovery becomes a way of life: Community disaster fatigue is on the rise with more frequent floods [2d]
- Distant exoplanets may be hiding water beyond Webb Telescope's reach, study finds [2d]
- Shrimp feeding behavior observed under simulated microgravity [2d]
- Himalayan snowfall has been miscalculated for years, here's how we found a new way to measure it [2d]
- What one of Emperor Hadrian's latrines is telling us about the durability of Roman concrete [2d]
- For Black girls, puberty is more than physical—it transforms conversations about identity [2d]
- Zirconium tweak unlocks stronger cast aluminum alloy with ductility boost [2d]
- Hubble discovers first of star cluster's missing black holes [2d]
- Hidden in plain sight: Caribbean reef fish nestle in tube worms, revealing previously undocumented partnership [2d]
- Why communities resist saving the planet even when sustainability promises a better future? [2d]
- Brazil's highland forest has been shaped by climate change and Indigenous people for 6,000 years [2d]
- Theorization of environmental justice in Chinese political philosophy [2d]
- Wealthier and more populated metropolitan areas respond more strongly to early drought news by saving water [2d]
- Study reveals how gas bubbles shaped Kīlauea's 2018 lava flow [2d]
- Atoms tell different stories when light hits a molecule in trillionths of a second [2d]
- Big bees have the most to lose as global CO₂ levels rise: New research [2d]
- Climate shocks are hitting South Africa's food businesses—study shows what they need to adapt [2d]
- Chemists make elusive carbon-bridged sandwich molecule once thought too strained to exist [2d]
- Widely-used method for assessing stream health doesn't work very well [2d]
- 3D-printable elastic polymer proves surprisingly strong and durable [2d]
- The 2026 World Cup's header trends: More assists, higher precision [2d]
- The US just approved a giant space mirror to test 'sunlight on demand.' Low Earth orbit is getting weird [2d]
- Study reports the first detection of a sugar in interstellar space [2d]
- Uncovering the evidence for child abuse and neglect in archaeological remains [2d]
- Solving a 30-year-old puzzle about a mysterious superconducting material [2d]
- Major earthquakes can affect Southeast Asia sea-level projections [2d]
- Biosensor detects nanoplastics in water within minutes [2d]
- 2.5 million stem cells reveal first genome-scale guide to gene function [2d]
- 3,400-year-old gold diadems and mouth-pieces from Cyprus blend the art of Egypt, Greece and the Near East [2d]
- The ball is round—and contrary to some keepers' views, in this World Cup it has performed just fine [2d]
- Random by design: Flickering genes may spend energy to achieve precision [2d]
- Scientists' credibility depends on audience and perceived motives [2d]
- Invasive aoudad pose deadly risk to native bighorn sheep [2d]
- As super El Niño draws global attention, the Indian Ocean may hold the key to Mediterranean climate extremes [2d]
- Medieval plague survivors left us graffiti, court records and a lesson for COVID [2d]
- Atomic‐scale tracing of lithium trapped in copper current collectors [2d]
- Chitosan-based hydrogel membranes as transparent biomaterials for skin regeneration [2d]
- Oobleck droplets reveal 5 ways cornstarch 'goo' behaves when hitting water [2d]
- Netflix's 'Heartstopper' sparked global book-buying boom, study finds [2d]
- Study links sea level to Earth's carbon thermostat [2d]
- Hidden fifth dimension could tune dark matter resonance, new theory proposes [2d]
- Firefly brightness holds a cautionary tale about accepting older measurements [2d]
- How the 'creeping normality' of large language models is quietly reshaping the life sciences [2d]
- Research reveals how grassroots football could help tackle climate change [2d]
- Quantum-gravitational mechanism could explain the universe's homogeneity [2d]
- Scientists strike invisible gold in the deep sea—locked inside fool's gold [2d]
- New 200Gbps photodetector doubles optical reception capacity for data centers [2d]
- Computer-guided electricity rapidly transforms flat nanofilms into 3D shapes on demand [2d]
- Study suggests increased biotoxicity due to anaerobic decolorization of diazo dye by wetland-derived Clostridium [2d]
- Banned chemicals continue to endanger environmental health in the Middle East and North Africa [2d]
- Only 13% of biodiversity promises from 180 influential companies pass accountability test [2d]
- RNA-only repair enzyme reveals how primordial life could have protected genomes [2d]
- World's first superconducting quantum heat engine offers path to larger quantum computers [2d]
- Heat wave smashes records across central US [2d]
- More than 2,700 died as result of heat waves in England, researchers say [2d]
- China's 'Green Great Wall' tames desert growth, but scientists warn the fight is not over [2d]
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