Headlines Edition

Monday Headlines: Memory muscle.

Russia claims Ukraine is responsible for the car-bombing death near Moscow of Darya Dugina, daughter of Putin ally and invasion proponent Alexander Dugin. / BBC News

Visualizing data from American mass killings—when four or more people are murdered—underscores how most of the deaths aren't those that generate headlines. / USA Today

Kansas's landslide vote to uphold abortion rights was reaffirmed in a recount sought by an election denier and anti-abortionist in hopes of sowing claims of fraud. / Kansas City Star

Google Maps often misleads people looking for abortion providers, with about a quarter of search results sending users to anti-abortion "crisis pregnancy centers." / Bloomberg

See also: "If the FBI and the Dept. of Justice can warn consumers about Covid-19 scams, they and other agencies can do the same for fake health clinics." / STAT

A new report predicts an "extreme heat belt"—with heat indices above 125 degrees—will cut though the central US in the next 30 years. / NBC News

"It's not like when you're exercising skeletal muscle, but it is perceptible." Why thinking hard makes us feel tired. / Nature

Why, relative to other countries' per-capita GDPs, the US has the cheapest gas in the world. / The Hustle

"They spread rumors about ketchup bottles exploding." A century ago, the ketchup wars became a battle over preservatives. / Atlas Obscura

An interactive tour of Michael Heizer's sprawling, 50-years-in-the-making art megasculpture in the Nevada desert. / The New York Times

"The vandals etched 'JR + DR 2022' into the limestone surface." Montana authorities are seeking information about who defaced the ancient Hellgate pictographs. / Hyperallergic

New images of Jupiter from the JWST show the Great Red Spot in stunning detail. / Motherboard

"One of the most successful scams ever perpetrated on Americans is the idea that dance music sucks." What we mean when we say Beyoncé is "saving" house music. / Vox

What it means now that you're seeing celebrities in your feed hawking Nissans from their phones. / Dirt

"Tim Curry is the master of camp and the master of menace and in the clip we finally witness something that is finally too ridiculous." An oral history of Red Alert 3. / Waypoint