• Creative Seed //
  • Images from my new home planet (where the environment is magical, the women have superpowers, and all the men are bearded). //
  • Archive
  • / message me
  • / Theme
73 ♥
themoreitgrows-thebetteritgets:

Me in the beach (Brazil)
Thanks for the submission…Very Nice!!!
210 ♥
163 ♥
n-a-s-a:

Thor’s Helmet (NGC 2359) and Planetary Nebula 
Credit & Copyright: Rogelio Bernal Andreo, Ray Gralak 
832 ♥
mothernaturenetwork:

The planet is warming, which is causing glaciers and ice sheets to melt and Earth’s sea levels to rise. As the ocean makes inroads over the next century, people living in low-lying areas will be displaced, leaving them in need of new homes. Don’t let memories of “Waterworld” deter you from checking out these innovative marine dwellings. Whether you’re concerned that your home will be soon be beachfront property, or you’ve simply always wanted to live life at sea, you don’t want to miss these groundbreaking (water-breaking?) designs.10 innovative ideas that let us live on water
230 ♥
15 ♥
79 ♥
Love makes a family
82 ♥
68 ♥
40 ♥
discoverynews:

Will You See Today’s Annular Solar Eclipse?
Just in case you haven’t heard, an annular eclipse will dazzle the Pacific Ocean on Sunday (Monday in Asia); beginning at dawn for China and Japan, ending at sunset for western U.S. states — marching from the Oregon and Northern California coast to Nevada, Utah, New Mexico, Arizona and Texas.
For U.S. eclipse watchers, the path of “annularity” — or the annular eclipse “ring of fire” — will be seen from locations such as Medford, Oregon; Chico, California; Reno, Nevada; St. George, Utah; Albuquerque, New Mexico, and Lubbock, Texas, according to Spaceweather.com. The whole event will begin in the U.S. from 5:30 p.m. PST and last for around 2 hours. Sadly for eastern U.S. states, the eclipse will occur after sunset, hence the focus on the West Coast.
keep reading
Please submit your photos of the eclipse here
601 ♥
randomologie:

Nice
495 ♥
invalidka:

Mikrus MR-300
31 ♥
122 ♥
537 ♥
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • Older →