The Brutalist Report - phys
- 1 in 3 US nonprofits that serve communities lost government funding in early 2025 [129d]
- The new species of flesh-eating dinosaur that once roamed south Wales: An imaging technology revolution [129d]
- The pollution court case that could reach far beyond the banks of the River Wye [129d]
- How gastronomy tourism evolved into international identity and cultural diplomacy [129d]
- Children should have a right to play in the streets, alleys, pavements and car parks of their neighborhoods [129d]
- Thai villagers have moved four times to escape rising sea levels: Life on the climate-change frontline [129d]
- Africa's air links are poor: Can the G20 push for more direct flights to improve tourism and trade? [129d]
- The search for neutrinoless double beta decay gets some noise cancelling headphones [129d]
- Common crystal proves ideal for low-temperature light technology [129d]
- Japan's sumo association turns 100, but the sport's rituals have a much older role shaping ideas about the country [129d]
- Forests recovering from acid rain mine rocks for nutrients, long-term study reveals [129d]
- Microscopic 'ocean' on a chip reveals new nonlinear wave behavior [129d]
- First high-resolution structure of key herpes virus protein opens path to new antivirals [129d]
- 'Molecular dam' stops energy leaks in nanocrystals to boost efficiency of light-driven reactions [129d]
- A reusable, washable nanofiber membrane can filter water sustainably [129d]
- Catastrophic loss of Florida's staghorn and elkhorn corals highlights accelerating climate pressures for reefs worldwide [129d]
- Coal plants emitted more pollution during the last government shutdown, while regulators were furloughed [129d]
- Berenicea's zooid size reduction over 200 million years contradicts Cope's rule, study reveals [129d]
- Fall-applied residuals repel resistant Italian ryegrass [129d]
- Astronomers expose CO-dark molecular gas, previously invisible to telescopes [129d]
- Chemists create publicly available tool that provides unrivaled look at RNA inside cells [129d]
- Perception of fraud as a victimless offense can weaken police investigations, study shows [129d]
- Advancing sea turtle conservation strategies by locating the highest risk areas for boat strikes [129d]
- Research shows waterhemp resistance can evolve from preemergent PPO inhibitor use [129d]
- The dilemma of copyright: 'Countries in the South need more access to innovation' [129d]
- Glowing amino acid sensors track cellular changes as they happen [129d]
- With a new molecule-based method, physicists peer inside an atom's nucleus [129d]
- Technique allows estimation of the force acting on each grain of sand in a dune [129d]
- Preserving the Amazon: A digital lifeline for the Biblioteca AmazĂłnica [129d]
- How AI will transform higher education [129d]
- The story of Astuvansalmi rock paintings continues—imaging technology may reveal new paintings [129d]
- Hidden economy of ransom-based human trafficking in Libya affects hundreds of thousands of migrants [129d]
- Dinosaurs in New Mexico thrived until the very end, study shows [129d]
- Wide variety of bats overwinter in Finnish rock habitats, study finds [129d]
- Woodland creation strategies reshaped by research [129d]
- Neanderthals and Mesolithic hunter-gatherers shaped European landscapes long before agriculture, study reveals [129d]
- Global study reveals tempo of invasive species' impacts [129d]
- Researchers warn of the urgent need to include the cumulative effects of extreme climate events in penguin conservation [129d]
- Warmer Nordic springs double the incidence of avian malaria, long-term study finds [129d]
- Bending biogenic crystals naturally without external forces [129d]
- Peatlands' 'huge reservoir' of carbon at risk of release, researchers warn [129d]
- Hitchhiking DNA picked up by a gene may save a species from extinction [129d]
- Origins of urban human-biting mosquito shed light on uptick in West Nile virus spillover from birds to humans [129d]
- Tiny ocean organisms missing from climate models may hold the key to Earth's carbon future [129d]
- A framework for the discovery of cell state-correcting medicines [129d]
- Dinosaur 'mummies' unlock secrets of their real-life appearance [129d]
- How Hurricane Helene changed groundwater chemistry [129d]
- Bilingual teenagers in Montreal exhibit writing skills on par with those of their French unilingual peers [129d]
- Astronomers share largest molecular survey to date: GOTHAM legacy data goes public [129d]
- Discovery reveals arsenical bronze production on Egypt's Elephantine Island during the Middle Kingdom [129d]
- Stone tools trace Paleolithic Pacific migration into North America [129d]
- Teaching tool created for hydrology education [129d]
- Coastal gray wolves display unexpected hunting behavior with unknown ecosystem impact [129d]
- The island split in two by time: How ancient rifting reshaped Madagascar's landscape [129d]
- Previously unknown microbe turns food waste into energy [129d]
- Ancient antelope teeth offer surprise insights into how early humans lived [129d]
- South American long-necked dinosaur could easily stand on two legs, computational study finds [130d]
- Unexpectedly high heat transfer on the nanoscale confirmed [130d]
- Adoption of open research practices exceeding expectations [130d]
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