The Brutalist Report - science
- Yaoundé is set to sizzle at 38°C by 2030: How green design could cool Cameroon's capital [93d]
- Chemists discover antibiotic for drug-resistant bacteria 'hiding in plain sight' [93d]
- Relying heavily on contractors can cut attendance by 27% for museums, theaters and other arts nonprofits—new research [93d]
- The fate of Marineland's belugas exposes the ethical cracks in Canadian animal law [93d]
- XRISM catches a pulsar's cosmic wind—and sees a surprising result [93d]
- Boys don't cry? How picture books can teach gendered ideas about pain [93d]
- Why most of us are reluctant to switch banks, even though it could cut our environmental impact [93d]
- Children with special educational needs are more likely to miss school—it's a sign of a system under strain [93d]
- Trends of generative AI applications in educational settings [94d]
- Why honey bees overthrow their queen [94d]
- Leaf arrangement steers vascular pattern evolution in ferns, research finds [94d]
- Iguanas on Clarion Island, Mexico, found to predate human presence in the Americas [94d]
- Air pollution sharply raises workplace accident risk, study finds [94d]
- Cows with freedom of choice: How the 'dairy barn of the future' could improve animal welfare [94d]
- How missing nutrients rewire fly brains to seek out beneficial microbes [94d]
- Major Canadian banks' digital emissions stay massive while they disclose less and less [94d]
- 'Sticky' chemistry secrets could unlock cleaner, more efficient fuel production [94d]
- Imaging technique maps fleeting intermediates in hydrogen electrocatalysis [94d]
- Aboveground, not belowground productivity drives variability in biomass crop's net primary productivity [94d]
- An old fish fossil tells a new story about lamniform shark evolution [94d]
- Memristors achieve stable resistance values tied to fundamental constants of nature [94d]
- When a hurricane threatens, these tips can help you prepare [94d]
- Discovery of how a coral stiffens its skeleton on demand opens new directions for bio-inspired engineering [94d]
- More friends, more division: Study finds growing social circles may fuel polarization [94d]
- Why did ancient people build Poverty Point? [94d]
- Hurricane Ian dataset reveals link between first-floor elevation and flood damage [94d]
- Electric signals reveal magnetic spin waves, hinting at faster computing [94d]
- Mysterious transient objects in sky linked to nuclear testing and unidentified anomalous phenomena [94d]
- New software tool fast-tracks identification and response to microbial threats [94d]
- Topological insulator maintains quantum spin Hall effect at higher temperatures [94d]
- New earthquake model goes against the grain [94d]
- As global warming worsens, so may space communications [94d]
- Physics-based model can predict floods and improve water management worldwide [94d]
- Supercomputer-developed AI learns the intricate language of biomolecules [94d]
- Tiny galaxy, big find: Black hole discovered in nearby Segue 1 [94d]
- Chimpanzees in Uganda use flying insects to tend their wounds, study reveals [94d]
- Humanity rises as wildlife recedes: Two studies show the extent of human domination over nature [94d]
- Can AI have morality? Philosophy weighs in [94d]
- Nuclear clock technology enables unprecedented investigation of fine-structure constant stability [94d]
- Fossil hand from human relative puzzles scientists with mix of human- and gorilla-like features [94d]
- Distributed quantum sensor network achieves ultra-high resolution near Heisenberg limit [94d]
- Remote work reduced gender discrimination. Returning to the office may change that [94d]
- Seven things Halloween and Hollywood get wrong about bats [94d]
- From grooming gangs to Virginia Giuffre, this is the common thread in abuse [94d]
- Metallic nanodots use reactive oxygen selectively kill cancer cells [94d]
- Despite naysayers and rising costs, data show that college still pays off for students, and society overall [94d]
- AI is changing who gets hired. What skills will keep you employed? [94d]
- 'Minimalist' lifestyles may not effectively tackle overconsumption. Can performance management help? [94d]
- California schools are losing tree canopy, study finds [94d]
- Seafloor-foraging sea snakes sometimes perform a puzzling wiggle [94d]
- Global study reveals seabirds as critical connectors between islands, the ocean and people [94d]
- Racial disparities persist in victim compensation for homicide survivors [94d]
- Two earthquakes recorded just hours apart in NC mountain community, U.S. Geological Survey reports [94d]
- UK families lose nearly a fifth of income after job loss [94d]
- Addressing population disparities near the worst Superfund sites [94d]
- AI now drives every stage of materials research, review finds [94d]
- Dwarf galaxies tip the scales in favor of dark matter over modified gravity [94d]
- New test can flag drugs that could be harmful to cats [94d]
- New DNA tool tags 'zombie cells' for easier identification in living tissue [94d]
- Matching gene expression to metabolite production in single plant cells [94d]
- People don't worry about losing jobs to AI, even when told it could happen soon [94d]
- Amami rabbits show exceptionally delayed maturity in island environment [94d]
- California kills 4 wolves, removes pack after Sierra cattle attacks [94d]
- Rethinking how nucleoside supplementation speeds up DNA replication: It's not just about having enough [94d]
- Once tadpoles lose lungs, they never get them back [94d]
- How tectonics and astronomical cycles shaped the Late Paleozoic climate [94d]
- Dinosaur 'mummies' help scientists visualize the fleshy details of these ancient animals [94d]
- Should you pour coffee down the drain? An environmental scientist explains [94d]
- Global construction carbon footprint set to double by 2050 [94d]
- NZ's first marine reserve is turning 50. The lessons from its recovery are invaluable [94d]
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