1
2
Former Glencore oil trader Alex Beard charged with corruption in West Africa (theguardian.com)
18
Anger mounts over environmental cost of Google datacentre in Uruguay (theguardian.com)
2
Women pushed into brutal conditions in support of 'sustainable' sugar (nytimes.com)
1
The piranha problem: Large effects swimming in a small pond (columbia.edu)
3
The Data That Powers A.I. Is Disappearing Fast (nytimes.com)
1
'No education, just liberation ' – Béla Tarr on film and politics in Hungary (theguardian.com)
1
Playing for survival: the blind Japanese woman keeping a music tradition alive (theguardian.com)
3
Bernice Johnson Reagon, US civil rights activist and singer, dies aged 81 (theguardian.com)
2
State media pushes back on claims China has entered 'a historical garbage time' (theguardian.com)
7
Signs of two gases in clouds of Venus could indicate life, scientists say (theguardian.com)
1
Professional Poker Players Know the Optimal Strategy but Don't Always Use It (scientificamerican.com)
1
Indigenous leaders frustrated despite cloak's return to Brazil after 300 years (theguardian.com)
74
Peter Buxtun, whistleblower who exposed Tuskegee syphilis study, has died (theguardian.com)
3
Elon Musk beats $500M severance suit over mass Twitter layoffs (theguardian.com)
4
Wildlife Protections Take a Back Seat to SpaceX's Ambitions (nytimes.com)
8
In Ukraine, Killings of Surrendering Russians Divide an American-Led Unit (nytimes.com)
5
Brazil's unparalleled spate of book bans is page out of US culture wars (theguardian.com)
4
Study Finds Alaskan Ice Field Melting at an 'Incredibly Worrying' Pace (nytimes.com)
1
Ismail Kadare, Whose Novels Brought Albania's Plight to the World, Dies at 88 (nytimes.com)
7
Pranksters reveal odes to Putin were Russian translations of Nazi verse (theguardian.com)
3
Scientists Find First Evidence That Butterflies Crossed an Ocean (nytimes.com)
3
Rising sea levels will disrupt Americans' lives by 2050, study finds (theguardian.com)
3
'It's been hell': injured Amazon workers turn to GoFundMe to pay bills (theguardian.com)
8
Reggie Jackson on playing baseball in the 1960s in the South (thenation.com)
2
Company linked to federal execution spree will no longer produce key drug (theintercept.com)
4
About Deep Earth Microbes (nytimes.com)
2
Research reveals toxic PFAS 'forever chemicals' accumulate in testes (theguardian.com)
23
Youth activists win 'unprecedented' climate settlement in Hawaii (theguardian.com)
4
It's Time to Learn How to Blow Things Up Again (foreignpolicy.com)
1
The Weatherman Who Tried to Bring Climate Science to a Red State (nytimes.com)
2
Colorado was built on stolen tribal land worth $1.7T, report finds (theguardian.com)
2
Foraging on U.S. Public Lands Is Becoming More Limited (nytimes.com)
3
Top banks 'greenwashing their role in destruction of the Amazon' (theguardian.com)
22
Wild horses reintroduced to Kazakhstan steppes after absence of two centuries (theguardian.com)
17
Gravity Without Mass: UAH Study Proposes Alternative to Dark Matter (azoquantum.com)
92
Researchers identify major driver of inflammatory bowel and related diseases (theguardian.com)
2
Stable sperm counts in Denmark cast doubt on 'spermageddon' fears (theguardian.com)
5
Oceans face 'triple threat' of extreme heat, oxygen loss and acidification (theguardian.com)
2
Corporations invested in carbon offsets that were 'likely junk', analysis says (theguardian.com)
17
US girls getting first periods earlier over the last 50 years, study finds (theguardian.com)
1
Masters of War: In search of the new world order in Munich (harpers.org)
1
The Lynching of Bob Broome (theatlantic.com)
14
Lawyers to Plastics Makers: Prepare for 'Astronomical' PFAS Lawsuits (nytimes.com)
15
New 9/11 Evidence Points to Deep Saudi Complicity (theatlantic.com)
3
Last major Arabic-style mosque in China loses its domes (theguardian.com)
2
Wild birds possess genetic predispositions to learn population-specific songs (phys.org)
10
Details of U.S. Backed Kidnapping, Torture and Murder in Afghanistan (nytimes.com)
2
Their Palm Springs neighborhood burned in the 1960s; now they seek compensation (nytimes.com)
0
[flagged] Israeli soldiers and police tipping off groups that attack Gaza aid trucks (theguardian.com)
2
Environmental advocates heartbroken over sale of Florida seabird preserve (theguardian.com)
103
'I'm the new Oppenheimer ': Palantir's first-ever AI warfare conference (theguardian.com)
10
Blacks and Jews were excluded from Alameda County juries for decades, Feds say (jpost.com)
42
Dutch woman, 29, granted euthanasia approval on grounds of mental suffering (theguardian.com)
117
Proteins in blood could provide early cancer warning 'by more than seven years' (theguardian.com)
3
White House Worries Russia's Momentum Is Changing Trajectory of Ukraine War (nytimes.com)
2
The rise and fall of Ashley Madison: 'People lost their lives' (theguardian.com)
8
'Magical thinking': hopes for sustainable jet fuel not realistic, report finds (theguardian.com)
13
Children 'piled up and shot': new details emerge of ethnic cleansing in Darfur (theguardian.com)
2
Tornadoes Are Coming in Bunches. Scientists Are Trying to Figure Out Why (nytimes.com)
3
UN expert attacks 'exploitative' world economy in fight to save planet (theguardian.com)
5
Russia to Hold Drills on Tactical Nuclear Weapons in New Tensions with West (nytimes.com)
2
The wild rise of Zillow Gone Wild (washingtonpost.com)
2
Remembering Walid Daqqa, a prisoner with a 'heretical belief in life' (972mag.com)
4
The song that ended Europe's longest running fascist regime (bbc.com)
1
Exchange over yarmulke brings antisemitism into focus in murder trial (forward.com)
2
Generative AI Meets CRISPR (nytimes.com)
0
'I Don't Think the Abyss Is Worth Looking into Anymore' (nytimes.com)
6
Chemist fired by ADA for not endorsing Splenda-filled salads to diabetics (theguardian.com)
5