Son of a Griz
19. University of Arizona. Psychology Major

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Son of a Griz
scanzen:

3500 mirrors of the Mont-Louis solar furnace, the first solar furnace in the world. In: LIFE Science Library - The engineer by C. C. Furnas, Joe McCarty and the Editors of TIME - LIFE BOOKS (hungarian edition by Műszaki Könyvkiadó,1972).
ikenbot:

Stars & Mars
ikenbot:

Asteroids Battered Young Earth Longer Than Thought
A giant ancient barrage of asteroids striking Earth may have lasted much longer than previously thought, with some collisions perhaps even rivaling those that created the largest craters on the moon, researchers say.
Scientists think untold numbers of asteroids and comets pummeled Earth, the moon and the inner planets during an era known as the Late Heavy Bombardment about 4.1 billion to 3.8 billion years ago. Investigators continue to debate the precise nature of this epoch in terms of what happened and how long it lasted.
To learn more about the Late Heavy Bombardment, scientists would like to analyze the most obvious evidence cosmic impacts leave behind, their craters. However, while such craters are preserved well in the vacuum of the moon environment, they disappear quickly on Earth due to erosion and tectonic activity.
Instead, researchers analyzed other evidence of asteroid impacts — millimeter- to centimeter-thick layers of rock droplets known as spherules.
inothernews:

Hey Tumblr?
Go do this.
Everything, of course, starts with a string.
ZoomInfo
alchymista:


Microscopic Beauty
Keratin filaments in the cytoplasm and nucleus of rat kidney
Parasitic filaria worms (in red) inside the lymphatic cells of a mouse’s ear
Bladder of the Bladderwort, a carnivorous plant that traps tiny organisms in its bladder
Red velvet mite
Anther of a silver wattle or mimosa tree
Bovine pulmonary artery cells stained so that actin, mitochondria and DNA appear in yellow and blue
alchymista:


Microscopic Beauty
Keratin filaments in the cytoplasm and nucleus of rat kidney
Parasitic filaria worms (in red) inside the lymphatic cells of a mouse’s ear
Bladder of the Bladderwort, a carnivorous plant that traps tiny organisms in its bladder
Red velvet mite
Anther of a silver wattle or mimosa tree
Bovine pulmonary artery cells stained so that actin, mitochondria and DNA appear in yellow and blue
alchymista:


Microscopic Beauty
Keratin filaments in the cytoplasm and nucleus of rat kidney
Parasitic filaria worms (in red) inside the lymphatic cells of a mouse’s ear
Bladder of the Bladderwort, a carnivorous plant that traps tiny organisms in its bladder
Red velvet mite
Anther of a silver wattle or mimosa tree
Bovine pulmonary artery cells stained so that actin, mitochondria and DNA appear in yellow and blue
alchymista:


Microscopic Beauty
Keratin filaments in the cytoplasm and nucleus of rat kidney
Parasitic filaria worms (in red) inside the lymphatic cells of a mouse’s ear
Bladder of the Bladderwort, a carnivorous plant that traps tiny organisms in its bladder
Red velvet mite
Anther of a silver wattle or mimosa tree
Bovine pulmonary artery cells stained so that actin, mitochondria and DNA appear in yellow and blue
alchymista:


Microscopic Beauty
Keratin filaments in the cytoplasm and nucleus of rat kidney
Parasitic filaria worms (in red) inside the lymphatic cells of a mouse’s ear
Bladder of the Bladderwort, a carnivorous plant that traps tiny organisms in its bladder
Red velvet mite
Anther of a silver wattle or mimosa tree
Bovine pulmonary artery cells stained so that actin, mitochondria and DNA appear in yellow and blue
alchymista:


Microscopic Beauty
Keratin filaments in the cytoplasm and nucleus of rat kidney
Parasitic filaria worms (in red) inside the lymphatic cells of a mouse’s ear
Bladder of the Bladderwort, a carnivorous plant that traps tiny organisms in its bladder
Red velvet mite
Anther of a silver wattle or mimosa tree
Bovine pulmonary artery cells stained so that actin, mitochondria and DNA appear in yellow and blue
religiousragings:

So simple…
inothernews:

The far (but topographically colorful) side of the Moon.
(via NASA APOD)