rfmcdonald (
rfmcdonald) wrote2018-04-10 02:09 pm
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Entry tags:
- africa,
- assimilation,
- astronomy,
- blogs,
- canada,
- cities,
- clash of ideologies,
- colombia,
- crime,
- ethnic conflict,
- evolution,
- former soviet union,
- glbt issues,
- history,
- human beings,
- language,
- latin america,
- links,
- middle east,
- migration,
- neptune,
- photos,
- politics,
- popular literature,
- public art,
- racism,
- rome,
- russia,
- sexuality,
- sociology,
- south america,
- space science,
- space travel,
- united states
[BLOG] Some Tuesday links
- Centauri Dreams shares a cool design for a mid-21st century Triton landing mission.
- Crooked Timber argues American conservative intellectuals have descended to hackwork.
- D-Brief notes the surprisingly important role that eyebrows may have played in human evolution.
- Dead Things notes how a hominid fossil discovery in the Arabian desert suggests human migration to Africa occurred almost 90 thousand years ago, longer than previously believed.
- Hornet Stories notes that biphobia in the LGBTQ community is one factor discouraging bisexuals from coming out.
- At In Media Res, Russell Arben Fox gives a favourable review to Wendell Berry's latest, The Art of Loading Brush.
- JSTOR Daily explores the connections between Roman civilization and poisoning as a means for murder.
- Lawyers, Guns and Money notes how the early 20th century American practice of redlining, denying minorities access to good housing, still marks the maps of American cities.
- The LRB Blog notes how the 1948 assassination of reformer Gaitan in Bogota changed Colombia and Latin America, touching the lives of Gabriel Garcia Marquez and Fidel Castro.
- The Map Room Blog notes that Spacing has launched a new contest, encouraging creators of inventive maps of Canadian cities to do their work.
- The NYR Daily notes a new exhibit of Victorian art that explores its various mirrored influences, backwards and forwards.
- At the Planetary Society Blog, Jason Davis explores TESS, the next generation of planet-hunting astronomy satellite from NASA.
- Starts With A Bang's Ethan Siegel shares photos of planetary formation around sun-like star TW Hydrae.
- Window on Eurasia notes that a combination of urbanization, Russian government policy, and the influence of pop culture is killing off minority languages in Russia.