The Brutalist Report - science
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- No new articles in the Past 12 Hours.
- Building robust materials from start may ease critical mineral risks, perspective argues [12d]
- The skills people still perform better than AI, according to workplace experts [12d]
- Extending cryo-electron microscopy beyond water [12d]
- Persistence, focus on tech makes U.S. 'serial acquirers' different [12d]
- Climate change to alter sea-land breeze and increase ozone pollution in Barcelona [12d]
- Plants reveal hidden PFAS pollution that soils can miss, study finds [12d]
- New global tracker maps urban growth in hazard zones every six months [12d]
- Why restoring rivers isn't enough: New research shows fish are evolving in response to human-made rivers [12d]
- A look at the SpaceX IPO by the numbers [12d]
- Cosmic dawn fuel discovery unlocks early galaxy growth secrets [12d]
- CO₂ injection reveals hidden cement chemistry behind 13% stronger early strength [12d]
- New cavity control strategy improves performance of blue vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers [12d]
- Third-grade impulses linked to lower academic achievement and education into adulthood [12d]
- Ancient DNA from Tuscan wells reveals origins of modern wine [12d]
- Quantum friction causes light to slow down nanoworld movements [12d]
- AI study reveals stark inequalities in global climate plans [12d]
- Why cells started sticking together could help explain how animals first evolved [12d]
- A new kind of entanglement helps quantum sensors tune out noise [12d]
- Integrating sustainable practices into undergraduate science education [12d]
- AI fast-forwards molecular simulations by 10,000-fold [12d]
- Light echoes reveal possible dark matter buildup around supermassive black holes [12d]
- Parents' heat warning songs may prime zebra finch chicks for heat before they hatch [12d]
- Heat claimed more than 200,000 lives in Europe since 2022: WHO [12d]
- When seeds mislead, weeds succeed: Researchers uncover surprising ways weeds spread [12d]
- Newly synthesized fullerene material remains metallic even under low temperatures [12d]
- Capable CEOs communicate climate risks more consistently [12d]
- Even weak ocean models can provide valuable information for environmental forecasts, study shows [12d]
- 'Selection shadow' may explain why longer lives bring more age-related disease [12d]
- Forensic psychology faces bias claims in risk tools and courtroom testimony [12d]
- Record heat pushes human-driven warming to 1.39C, 1.5C could arrive by 2030 [12d]
- ESA officially adopts ARRAKIHS mission: EU leads the exploration of the low surface brightness universe [12d]
- Genomes from Oceania offer new clues to human evolution [12d]
- Diffusion model links foam physics to voting shifts and market behavior [12d]
- How bacteria use acetyl coenzyme as a building block in the formation of cells [12d]
- Annual carbon dioxide peak reaches 432 parts per million [12d]
- Research proposes fairness framework for faculty promotion and tenure decisions [12d]
- Silent prions reveal new cross-species chronic wasting disease risk in lab tests [12d]
- Seven ratios predict SME insolvency up to three years early [12d]
- Open-source AI may aid climate and development but deepen inequality, experts warn [12d]
- Salmonella genomes reveal 45 previously unknown toxins in foodborne bacteria [12d]
- Collapsing stars could spawn mini-universes, offering new path to gravastars [12d]
- 'She should have seen it coming': How radicalization policies put the burden on Muslim mothers [12d]
- Sharks, seals, hunters, tourists: How wildlife‑human interactions matter for conservation [12d]
- Chemists snap together complex 3D molecules from highly reactive 'radicals'—without losing their shape [12d]
- Behind every overconfident leader might be a 'rational sycophant,' veteran game theorists find [12d]
- Cyclone Gabrielle-style storms may unleash tens of thousands more North Island landslides [12d]
- Carbon dioxide removal slow to take off, alarming scientists [12d]
- Smuggled dinosaur fossils return to Mongolia after two decades [12d]
- This is how supermassive black holes feed themselves [12d]
- Forest gaps and deadwood boost bird and bat diversity in woodlands [12d]
- Indoor urban agriculture isn't necessarily low carbon, study shows [12d]
- First global map of mycorrhizal fungi reveals true scale of underground networks across the planet [12d]
- Organic molecule with ultranarrow emission spectrum could lead to better LEDs [12d]
- Physicists introduce phase contrast to electron microscopy, delivering sharper images of our body's tiniest proteins [12d]
- Prescribed fires can cut smoke pollution for years, miles beyond burn areas [12d]
- Overlooked pollutants are responsible for about 15% of current global warming, study shows [12d]
- Using history to breed better cherries [12d]
- Wasp spider reveals rapid genetic adaptation during decades-long march into northern Europe [12d]
- First leather bag from T-Rex cells to be auctioned in Paris [12d]
- El Nino is here and scientists fear it'll be big, bad and costly with heat, floods, droughts, fires [12d]
- Rare deep-sea goblin sharks filmed in natural habitat for first time [12d]
- AI doesn't just help us think, it thinks instead of us: What this means for the process of learning [12d]
- Amazon deforestation is falling, but progress is stalling [12d]
- Why animal calls sound alike in time: Most species share a common communication tempo [12d]
- Ocean glow meets 3D printing with living gels that sense mechanical force [12d]
- Municipal governments are often slow to act, except when FIFA comes to town [12d]
- Novel nanowire device offers rapid, noninvasive cancer detection [12d]
- Earth's energy imbalance has doubled—here's why that matters [12d]
- How a shape-shifting tiny rover inspired by Japanese toys autonomously explored the moon [12d]
- Life after death: From burned trees to bleached corals, how dead organisms live on as the building blocks of new life [12d]
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