[BLOG] Some Thursday links
- Bad Astronomer Phil Plait takes a look at the German city of Nordlingen, formed in a crater created by the impact of a binary asteroid with Earth.
- Centauri Dreams reports on the possibility that the farside of the Moon might bear the imprint of an ancient collision with a dwarf planet the size of Ceres.
- D-Brief notes that dredging for the expansion of the port of Miami has caused terrible damage to corals there.
- Dangerous Minds looks at the last appearances of David Bowie and Iggy Pop together on stage.
- The Dragon’s Tales notes that China is on track to launch an ambitious robotic mission to Mars in 2020.
- Karen Sternheimer at the Everyday Sociology Blog talks about what sociological research actually is.
- Gizmodo reports on the discovery of a torus of cool gas circling Sagittarius A* at a distance of a hundredth of a light-year.
- io9 reports about Angola Janga, an independent graphic novel by Marcelo D’Salete showing how slaves from Africa in Brazil fought for their freedom and independence.
- The Island Review shares some poems of Matthew Landrum, inspired by the Faroe Islands.
- Joe. My. God. looks at how creationists are mocking flat-earthers for their lack of scientific knowledge.
- Language Hat looks at the observations of Mary Beard that full fluency in ancient Latin is rare even for experts, for reasons I think understandable.
- Melissa Byrnes wrote at Lawyers, Guns and Money about the meaning of 4 June 1989 in the political transitions of China and Poland.
- Marginal Revolution notes how the New York Times has become much more aware of cutting-edge social justice in recent years.
- The NYR Daily looks at how the memories and relics of the Sugar Land prison complex outside of Houston, Texas, are being preserved.
- Jason C Davis at the Planetary Society Blog looks at the differences between LightSail 1 and the soon-to-be-launched LightSail 2.
- The Power and the Money’s Noel Maurer looks in detail at the high electricity prices in Argentina.
- Peter Rukavina looks at the problems with electric vehicle promotion on PEI.
- Starts With A Bang’s Ethan Siegel looks at when the universe will have its first black dwarf. (Not in a while.)
- Window on Eurasia suggests that Belarusians are not as interested in becoming citizens of Russia as an Internet poll suggests.
- Arnold Zwicky highlights a Pride Month cartoon set in Antarctica featuring the same-sex marriage of two penguins.
Written by Randy McDonald
June 6, 2019 at 4:30 pm
Posted in Assorted, Canada, Demographics, Economics, History, Politics, Popular Culture, Science, Social Sciences
Tagged with angola, antarctica, argentina, asteroids, astronomy, belarus, birds, black dwarf, blogs, brazil, ceres, china, clash of ideologies, communism, coral, david bowie, democracy, earth, energy, environment, faroes, florida, futurology, germany, glbt issues, history, humour, iggy pop, latin america, latin language, links, marcelo d'salete, mars, mass media, milky way galaxy, moon, national identity, nördlingen, oceans, penguins, poetry, poland, popular literature, popular music, portugal, prince edward island, russia, Sagittarius A*, slavery, social sciences, sociology, solar sails, solar system, south america, space science, space travel, technology, texas, united states, west norden