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  • Architectuul looks at the history of brutalism in late 20th century Turkey.

  • Bad Astronomer Phil Plait looks at the evidence for the Milky Way Galaxy having seen a great period of starburst two billion years ago, and notes how crowded the Milky Way Galaxy is in the direction of Sagittarius.

  • Centauri Dreams considers if astrometry might start to become useful as a method for detecting planets, and considers what the New Horizons data, to Pluto and to Ultima Thule, will be known for.

  • Belle Waring at Crooked Timber considers if talk of forgiveness is, among other things, sound.

  • D-Brief considers the possibility that the differing natures of the faces of the Moon can be explained by an ancient dwarf planet impact, and shares images of dust-ringed galaxy NGC 4485.
  • Dead Things notes the discovery of fossil fungi one billion years old in Nunavut.

  • Far Outliers looks at how, over 1990, Russia became increasingly independent from the Soviet Union, and looks at the final day in office of Gorbachev.

  • Gizmodo notes the discovery of literally frozen oceans of water beneath the north polar region of Mars, and looks at an unusual supernova, J005311 ten thousand light-years away in Cassiopeia, product of a collision between two white dwarfs.

  • JSTOR Daily notes how the colour of navy blue is a direct consequence of slavery and militarism, and observes the historical influence, or lack thereof, of Chinese peasant agriculture on organic farming in the US.

  • Language Log considers a Chinese-language text from San Francisco combining elements of Mandarin and Cantonese.

  • Lawyers, Guns and Money notes the terrible environmental consequences of the Vietnam War in Southeast Asia, and Shakezula at Lawyers, Guns and Money takes a look at how, and perhaps why, Sam Harris identifies milkshake-throwing at far-right people as a form of "mock assassination".

  • The Map Room Blog shares a personal take on mapmaking on the Moon during the Apollo era.

  • Marginal Revolution observes a paper suggesting members of the Chinese communist party are more liberal than the general Chinese population. The blog also notes how Soviet quotas led to a senseless and useless mass slaughter of whales.

  • Russell Darnley writes about the complex and tense relationship between Indonesia and Australia, each with their own preoccupations.

  • Martin Filler writes at the NYR Daily about I.M. Pei as an architect specializing in an "establishment modernism". The site also takes a look at Orientalism, as a phenomenon, as it exists in the post-9/11 era.

  • Personal Reflections' Jim Belshaw reflects on the meaning of Australia's New England.

  • The Planetary Society Blog notes how Hayabusa 2 is having problems recovering a marker from asteroid Ryugu.

  • Peter Rukavina reports on an outstanding Jane Siberry concert on the Island.

  • The Russian Demographics Blog shares a map of homophobia in Europe.

  • The Signal looks at how the Library of Congress makes use of wikidata.

  • The Speed River Journal's Van Waffle reports, with photos, from his latest walks this spring.

  • Starts With A Bang's Ethan Siegel considers what the Earth looked like when hominids emerged, and explains how amateur astronomers can capture remarkable images.

  • Frank Jacobs at Strange Maps shares a controversial map depicting the shift away from CNN towards Fox News across the United States.

  • Daniel Little at Understanding Society examines the Boeing 737 MAX disaster as an organizational failure.

  • Window on Eurasia looks why Turkey is backing away from supporting the Circassians, and suggests that the use of the Russian Orthodox Church by the Russian state as a tool of its rule might hurt the church badly.

  • Arnold Zwicky takes apart, linguistically and otherwise, a comic playing on the trope of Lassie warning about something happening to Timmy. He also
    reports on a far-removed branch of the Zwicky family hailing from Belarus, as the Tsvikis.

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