The Brutalist Report - phys
- Lost English legend decoded, solving Chaucerian mystery and revealing a medieval preacher's meme [238d]
- Many Texas communities are dangerously unprepared for floods. Lack of funding plays a big role [238d]
- 'Large' furry creatures found in Mexico rain forest in first-of-its-kind sighting [238d]
- Africans survived 10,000 years of climate changes by adapting food systems: Study offers lessons for modern times [238d]
- How AI can help protect bees from dangerous parasites [238d]
- Mapping corn DNA reveals how genes shape plant traits and pest resistance [238d]
- Are there upsides to 'overboarding?' [238d]
- Study reveals hidden enzyme redundancy in staph bacteria's survival pathways [238d]
- Pavlov's dogs were conditioned to go to their treat; why do some animals learn to interact with the bell instead? [238d]
- Whose turn is it? The question is at the heart of language, and chimpanzees ask it too [238d]
- Consolation, community, national identity in the UK: What is lost when pubs close, and how they can be saved [238d]
- Why many Americans still think Darwin was wrong, yet the British do not [238d]
- How to give children the freedom to play all across the city, not just on playgrounds [238d]
- The Habitable Worlds Observatory could find more very massive stars [238d]
- How universities can keep protests from turning violent: Three lessons from the 2024 pro-Palestinian encampments [238d]
- Auditors' disclosure style can affect how their competence is perceived [238d]
- Synthetic biology could support future outposts on the moon and Mars [238d]
- An alternative adhesive for wearable medical devices could offer relief for allergy-prone skin [238d]
- Relief from drought in southwest U.S. likely isn't coming, according to new research [238d]
- Fish species evolved different hunting strategies using distinct visual cues [238d]
- A new approach for generating inner ear hair cells expands research possibilities [238d]
- NASA's IXPE imager reveals mysteries of rare pulsar [238d]
- High ocean temperatures may slow deadly coral disease, new study finds [238d]
- How women are trapped in years of homelessness that often begin in their teens [238d]
- Reduction in supply of prey was decisive factor in extinction of saber-toothed tigers, study finds [238d]
- Eradicated since 1929: Scientists work to keep foot and mouth disease away [238d]
- Taliban 'maintaining a balancing act' in relationships with other local jihadi groups, study shows [238d]
- Don't bet on Friday: Research shows financial risk-taking rises at end of work week, without payoff [238d]
- Ultra-hot Jupiter's death spiral could reveal stellar secrets [238d]
- Inverse relationship between solar corona brightness and velocity of coronal mass ejections discovered [238d]
- New study reveals how corals teach their offspring to beat the heat [238d]
- New insights into the fish community in wind farms in Germany [238d]
- Corals crossbred to boost genetic diversity for Florida and Caribbean reefs [238d]
- Expert comment: Sustainable farming and animal welfare [238d]
- Rethinking the MBA: Character as the educational foundation for future business leaders [238d]
- Medieval medicine was smarter than you think—and weirdly similar to TikTok trends [238d]
- Many fish are social, but pesticides are pushing them apart [238d]
- 2D materials design: Material strength and toughness simultaneously achieved through layer twisting [238d]
- The anatomy of a flash flood: Why the Texas flood was so deadly [238d]
- Two dead in New Jersey as soaked US northeast braces for more rain [238d]
- Private spaceflight ends with a Pacific splashdown for astronauts from India, Poland and Hungary [238d]
- RNA viruses may differentially shape carbon recycling in the ocean [238d]
- The southern hemisphere is full of birds found nowhere else on Earth. Their importance has been overlooked [238d]
- A warning from the future: The risk if NZ gets climate adaptation policy wrong today [238d]
- Roundworm genome map benefits synthetic biology, human health [238d]
- The 100-year journey from quantum science to quantum technology [238d]
- To 'infinity' and beyond: Direct evidence of black hole birth found in galaxy named 'Infinity' [238d]
- Satellite constellations are too bright—may threaten astronomy and our night sky [238d]
- Understanding relationship development: Toward a more rigorous approach [238d]
- Ancient footprints reveal Neanderthal family hunts on beaches [238d]
- AERONET: Ensuring quality satellite data for mineral exploration [238d]
- Preliminary findings from Hurricane Maria investigation released [238d]
- Getting to know 3I/ATLAS, our solar system's newest interstellar visitor [238d]
- Study finds link between Grand Canyon landslide and Meteor Crater impact [238d]
- Rare distant object 2020 VN40 found in perfect sync with Neptune [238d]
- Chemically enriched carbon nanotube films boost photo-thermoelectric imaging performance [238d]
- Carbon credit accuracy for agricultural markets improved by new baseline system testing [238d]
- Astronomers use simulations to reconstruct three-star ejection from R136 cluster [238d]
- One survey by NASA's Roman could unveil 100,000 cosmic explosions [238d]
- New four-element semiconductor alloy promises advances in chip technology [238d]
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