The Brutalist Report - science
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- Melting glaciers could trigger more explosive eruptions globally [295d]
- Is Earth inside a huge void? 'Sound of the Big Bang' hints at possible solution to Hubble tension [295d]
- Smarter, faster, stronger: AI fuels the rise of new productive forces [295d]
- Cracking the quantum code: Light and glass are set to transform computing [295d]
- Solid catalyst breaks the rules: Oxygen evolution steps can happen simultaneously [295d]
- Strong geothermal potential discovered in northern Singapore [295d]
- Giving back or getting back? The rise of retributive philanthropy [295d]
- Satellite observations provide insight into post-wildfire forest recovery [295d]
- Primordial black holes could have accelerated early star formation [295d]
- Mutagenesis technique boosts the efficiency of rubisco, a key enzyme in photosynthesis [295d]
- Collective behavior study explores whether pigeons track others' eye movements [295d]
- Low-temperature plasma technique boosts nanozyme innovation for tackling antibiotics [295d]
- Scientists uncover 'superfamily' of bacterial predator proteins [295d]
- Fear in sync: Fruit flies experience collective survival through neurogenomic diversity [295d]
- Texas floods: How geography, climate and policy failures collided [295d]
- Study uncovers how harmful RNA clumps form—and a way to dissolve them [295d]
- Research on ice-forming compound could improve pipeline safety, carbon capture and storage [295d]
- PodGPT: AI model learns from science podcasts to better answer questions [295d]
- Losing Asian elephants could unravel tropical forest ecosystem [295d]
- Hydrogen atom transfer method selectively transforms carboxylic acids using an inexpensive photocatalyst [295d]
- 1% of offshore wind investments could restore millions of hectares of marine life [295d]
- Stream health assessment tool developed to guide restoration efforts [295d]
- Reusing sunflower seed flour can make bread more protein-packed and rich in antioxidants [295d]
- Scientists reconstruct 540 million years of sea level change in detail [295d]
- Young brood-parasitic cowbirds may seek out unrelated adult females as role models [295d]
- Survey records more than 1,400 newts killed on Hong Kong roads in two months [295d]
- Tracking proteins that help the COVID-19 virus replicate [295d]
- Steering brain cells with magnetic nanoparticles to rebuild lost connections [295d]
- How to use fusion to get to Proxima Centauri's potentially habitable exoplanet [295d]
- Drones help plant researchers detect soybean dicamba damage from the sky [295d]
- For fish, hovering uses double the energy of resting, study finds [295d]
- Beyond the alpha male: Primate studies challenge male-dominance norms [295d]
- Reviving search for extraterrestrial intelligence with high-energy astronomy [295d]
- North America's oldest known pterosaur unearthed in Petrified Forest National Park [295d]
- Cold hydrogen clouds discovered inside superheated Fermi bubbles at Milky Way's center [295d]
- Young adult literature is not as young as it used to be, shows a librarian's research [295d]
- Youth volunteering encourages young men to vote for the first time, research shows [295d]
- Physicists reveal how a lone spinon emerges in quantum magnetic models [295d]
- The surprising link between fast X-ray transients and the explosive death of massive stars [295d]
- Women scientists promote their research online less often than men, study finds [295d]
- Platform enhances purity and reproducibility of extracellular vesicle proteomics [295d]
- Six agricultural employment pathways identified for youth development [295d]
- Nature-friendly farming budget swells in UK—but cuts elsewhere make recovery fraught [295d]
- Civil servants' reactions to democratic decline reflect deep political divides [295d]
- Why are we so obsessed with bringing back the wooly mammoth? [295d]
- Turbulent research landscape imperils US brain gain, and ultimately American prosperity [295d]
- Discovery of rare medieval music brings sounds of monks back to Devon abbey for first time in 500 years [295d]
- A new way to wobble: Scientists uncover mechanism that causes formation of planets [295d]
- Plate tectonics—mineral olivine found crucial for heat transport in the mantle [295d]
- Autonomous vehicle's search in Mariana Trench helps advance understanding of deep sea and its critical minerals [295d]
- What research on sexting reveals about how men and women think about consent [295d]
- Overuse of riprap to prevent riverbank erosion is harming British Columbia's rivers [295d]
- Welcome to post-growth Europe. Can anyone accept this new political reality? [295d]
- Scientists use argon plasma to precisely position metal atoms, eliminating waste of precious metals [295d]
- Mouse hosts produce functional rat sperm, opening new doors for genetic research [295d]
- How often should you really be washing your bedding? A microbiologist explains [295d]
- Uncovering the mechanism behind dual-end cleavage in transfer RNAs [295d]
- Whose satisfaction is more important to your business? Your customers or your employees? [295d]
- Integrating ON-OFF switches for targeted mRNA therapeutics [295d]
- Underwater lake heat waves are on the rise, threatening aquatic life [295d]
- Misinformation lends itself to social contagion. Here's how to recognize and combat it [295d]
- Social media can support or undermine democracy. It comes down to how it's designed [295d]
- Rain showers can dramatically impact fungal communities in urban lakes [295d]
- It isn't all bloom and doom: Why algal blooms are becoming more prevalent [295d]
- How should we get rid of CO₂? These scientists want to turn it into stone [295d]
- What schools can learn from skate culture [295d]
- Russia is paying schoolgirls to have babies. Why is pronatalism on the rise around the world? [295d]
- Soft material behavior gets clearer as scientists directly map liquid crystal deformation [295d]
- Study reveals key drivers behind 3D layered structures in open star clusters [295d]
- Super-resolution imaging uncovers how lipid nanoparticles deliver RNA and where they fall short [295d]
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