The Brutalist Report - science
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- How plants stop growing to survive stress: Retired scientist's persistence reveals insight to boost farm yields [113d]
- New study outlines privacy solution for retail central bank digital currencies [113d]
- New research suggests deadly bat fungus is more widespread in western Canada than previously known [113d]
- Organocatalytic strategy provides a metal-free route to antiviral candidates [113d]
- From tropics to poles: How Pacific Ocean warming sets the stage for Antarctic stratospheric changes months later [113d]
- Need to parent differently now that your kid's a teen or tween? Five techniques that actually work [113d]
- Distant galaxy fades 20-fold in just two decades, challenging how supermassive black holes evolve [113d]
- Ice Age animals and slice of Earth history found in central Texas water cave [113d]
- Contaminated aquatic sediments can be remediated on site using new methods [113d]
- Hearing research traces evolution of key inner ear protein [113d]
- Marsh soils: Biodiversity fostered by self-organization [113d]
- Community music education a key youth well-being strategy [113d]
- Samuel Pepys censored his links to slavery, new study reveals [114d]
- Silicon nanospheres boost WS₂ second-harmonic generation 40-fold while preserving polarization [114d]
- If using ChatGPT is cheating, what about ghostwriting? The old debate behind a new panic [114d]
- Seismic activity in California varies with the seasons [114d]
- AI tool predicts wildfire danger faster than current systems [114d]
- Advanced dating method reveals age of Pacific coral architecture [114d]
- 'Cool' detectors cut neutrino mass upper limit by an order of magnitude [114d]
- Tourism work builds 100 transferable skills, study shows [114d]
- Webb and Hubble share the most comprehensive view of Saturn to date [114d]
- Microtubules discovered to play an active role in correctly distributing chromosomes during cell division [114d]
- Hooking big fish in warming oceans comes with a catch [114d]
- Why no individual is like another when epigenetics come into play [114d]
- Laser-modified graphene enables molecule-thick films to grow only where needed [114d]
- Protein modification discovery opens cancer therapy possibilities [114d]
- Urban AI should not be understood as a single, inevitable next stage of the smart city, say researchers [114d]
- Topological solitons power a chip-scale frequency comb source [114d]
- Motivations behind violent extremism uncovered in new global study [114d]
- Scientists engineer a 'Trojan Horse' to conquer aggressive brain cancer [114d]
- RNA-guided CRISPR system activates gene expression [114d]
- Is nectar naturally spiked? What widespread low-level ethanol could mean for pollinators [114d]
- Celluloid: The story of the plastic that made Hollywood [114d]
- Importance of sublimation for the Rocky Mountain snowpack highlighted in study [114d]
- Making quantum vibrations nonlinear to enable phonon-phonon interactions [114d]
- What the historic snow drought means for water, wildfires and the future of the West [114d]
- A forest cleanup crew at risk? What hotter Amazon lowlands could mean dung beetles [114d]
- XRISM clocks hot wind of galaxy M82 at 2 million mph [114d]
- Finding order in disorder: New mechanism amplifies transverse electron transport [114d]
- Why some reefs recover faster than others—mathematical model spotlights coral recruitment patterns [114d]
- Plastic washing at recycling plants can spike phthalates in wastewater, study suggests [114d]
- Parental advice on interacting with police varies widely by race [114d]
- Shell-cracking turtles defied mass extinction at the end of the Cretaceous period [114d]
- Studies offer insight into how owners experience pet loss [114d]
- If the Laschamps geomagnetic excursion happened today, aviation radiation exposure would be radically altered [114d]
- Brazil's fire corals may be facing silent extinction, experts say [114d]
- How New Jersey's limits on 'forever chemicals' in tap water brought levels down [114d]
- Using 'imaginative' AI to survey past and future earthquake damage [114d]
- Amazon wildfire emissions may be up to three times higher than estimated [114d]
- Rare mountain gorilla twins born in DR Congo: park authorities [114d]
- A captive chimp's instrumental performances hint at the evolution of vocal externalization [114d]
- Significant grade inflation may be occurring in graduate education, according to decades' worth of data [114d]
- Cactus catalog could help plant's prickly problem [114d]
- A potential antibiotic target emerges as pneumonia-linked enzyme's dynamic structure proves essential [114d]
- Scalable flow chemistry speeds deuteration of fatty acids with tunable isotope selectivity [114d]
- Stabilized hybrid photocatalyst boosts artificial photosynthesis efficiency [114d]
- One species or two? Understanding the Formosan legless lizard [114d]
- Developing optical vortex phase masks for the detection of habitable worlds [114d]
- JWST reveals most distant red galaxy yet at redshift 11.45 [114d]
- Dancing to invisible choreography, quantum computers can balance the noise [114d]
- Massive insect body size 300 million years ago may not have been due to high atmospheric oxygen [114d]
- Extreme global climate outcomes are possible even at 2°C warming, study warns [114d]
- How the body senses cold has been a mystery—until now [114d]
- Past CO₂ emissions may drive far bigger future economic losses [114d]
- The earliest dogs in Europe: 14,200-year-old DNA helps reveal their identity [114d]
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