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A scientist observes a small tadpole...
You can turn the objective lens, and twist both knobs. Check out the videos for the functions!
Multiple levels (parallel planes; rock surface curves down to right) of slickensided fault surfaces in an outcrop of Marron Fm. andesitic volcanic rock (in south-central British Columbia), with one of my fingers for scale. Above my finger, the lighter coloured material is a mineral vein (fluid flowed along a fault plane and mineral precipitated from solution) with a patchy distribution now because it is partly eroded away.
The slickenlines present have two different groove lineation directions, diagonal down to the left and down to the right in both the purplish-brown host rock and the light brown vein material. They record two different steep (sub-vertical) directions of fault motion at this site back in the Eocene (ca. 50 million years ago), a time of post-orogenic normal faulting in this part of western Canada.
C. J.R. Devaney
Caps were a bastard, couldn't really be fucked on this one.
Shouts to all the damage cats that turned up! Till next time killas! Stay tuned more to come.
unfortunately no techy black in this, rain washed away mulsh background. annoying. Some colours didnt work, hence lack of 3d shading/ bevel in some fills and fuck to be honest the bevels pretty shite in this one. Keep frosty kats.
Hit me up if you are in Ebrugh or Glasgow. Looking for more cats to paint with.
Rakem VT crew
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It is a science of how the ancient Romans produced this glass art 1700 years ago.
See the bottle in the bottle :-)
SCIENCE is the topic for Wed Jan 25 2017 Group Our Daily challenge
have read that air traffic has not only returned to pre-Corona/Covid levels, but has exceeded it ! - hoped this would not happen ...
China is building 20 new airports and the Indians are buying airplanes without end ... but the Americans are world champions and the greatest in wasting energy and with Trump they will certainly be greater than ever ...
new findings show that Europe is warming more than the rest of the world ... by the end of the century temperatures could be around 50°C (122.0 °F) in summer ...
we love perpetual economic growth and others are also entitled to our prosperity ... or not ? ...
habe gelesen dass der Flugverkehr den Level von vor Corona/Covid micht nur wieder erreicht hat, sondern ihn übertrifft - hatte gehofft, dies würde nicht geschehen ...
neue Erkenntnisse zeigen, dass sich Europa stärker erwärmt, als der Rest der Welt ... am Ende des Jahrhunderts können Temperature um die 50°C im Sommer enstehen ... aber vielleicht werden dass die Kipppunkte vorher verhindern ...
wir lieben das ewige Wirtschaftswachstum und andere haben auch ein Anrecht auf unseren Wohlstand ... oder ...
China baut an 20 neuen Flughäfen und die Inder kaufen Flugzeuge ohne Ende ...
FV0A0822_pa3
Searching my Google Maps right before the Lousiana Border we found the.INFINITY Science Center that actually was on One side of the Highway and the Other Side is where the John C. Stennis Space Center was by appointment only and that was where the actual launch the Rockets. What we were in for was a brush-up of our space program and a real Rocket Scientist’s explanation of how a rocket works, which filled any remaining empty brain cells I had with a new understanding of the complexity of rocket engines, and the realization I won’t be building one soon. Our visit was on a Monday and the crowds were sparse till later in the afternoon
A quick view of sunspots 2740 and 2741 on May 8, 2019. According to SpaceWeather.com (for May 9, 2019), “GEOMAGNETIC STORM WATCH: Minor G1-class geomagnetic storms are possible on May 11th when a coronal mass ejection (CME) grazes Earth's magnetic field. The source of the CME is big sunspot AR2740, which propelled the solar storm cloud in our direction three days ago. Auroras could appear as far south as the US-Canadian border.
Tech Specs: Meade 12" LX90, focal reducer, Canon 6D, Meade White-Light Solar Filter. Best 20% of 2000 frames. Image Date: May 8, 2019. Location: The Dark Side Observatory, Weatherly, PA, USA.
University of Barcelona
Women of Mathematics throughout Europe 4- 29 March 2019
International Women's Day
The opening of the exhibition was on March 11, 2019 and it was part of the Faculty's programme around the International Women's Day during March.There was also a talk on Mathematics and Paintings by Prof. Capi Corrales and an exhibition entitled Women in Science provided by the Women's Institute of the Catalan Government.
Universitat de Barcelona Motto : Libertas perfundet omnia Luce
University of Barcelona Motto : Freedom bathes everything with Light
To Hypatia, who edited the work "On the Conics of Apollonius", which divided cones into different parts by a plane.
"Life is an unfoldment, and the further we travel the more truth we can comprehend.To understand the things that are at our door is the best preparation for understanding those that lie beyond.
Reserve your right to think, for even to think wrongly is better than not to think at all." Hypatia (born c. 355 CE—died March 415)
Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain
By Indian artist Satish Gujral (1925 – 2020)
Part of an exhibition in the MAS museum in Antwerp in 2023.
Satish Gujral was an internationally acclaimed artist, muralist, sculptor, architect and writer. In his quest for a unique Indian artistic identity, free of European influences, Gujral came to be known as one of the pioneers of modernism in post-Independent India.
During the course of his seven-decade career, he also designed several notable buildings, including the Belgium Embassy in New Delhi.
Photo = top part. A variety of materials were assembled in a geometric composition. The work is an attempt by Gujral to combine modern design with the traditional use of colour of India.
Scientific knowledge is a body of statements of varying degrees of certainty--some most unsure, some nearly sure, none absolutely certain.
Richard P. Feynman
Available as Greeting Cards, Matted Prints, Laminated Prints, Mounted Prints, Canvas Prints, Framed Prints and Posters
www.redbubble.com/people/jhueilee/art/5223163-1-uncertain...
www.redbubble.com/people/jhueilee/art/5226170-1-lightning...
The Franco-Italian Antarctic research base of Concordia sits 1670 km from the South Pole. On the plateau some 3200 m high, the air is so thin that inhabitants live in a permanent state of hypoxia – lack of oxygen. The closest humans are 600 km away at Russia’s Vostok base. Average temperatures range from –30°C in the summer months to –60°C in the winter.
The ‘winterover’ crew who stay during the long cold winter to conduct research do not see the Sun rise above the horizon for four months. The crew learn to cope and live with the threats of cold, darkness, monotony, danger and no possibility of rescue.
Each year, ESA sponsors a research medical doctor for a year to run experiments on the rest of the crew of 15. There are few other places on Earth that resemble the isolation and extreme climate astronauts will endure on other planets – an opportunity for ESA to test technology and learn how humans behave in close quarters.
Research looks into how a multicultural team works together and functions under long, monotonous stress. From flying simulated spacecraft to monitoring sleep and analysing speech patterns with computers, each aspect that could hinder an astronaut far from home is being investigated to prepare for humanity’s exploration beyond Earth.
Credits: ESA/IPEV/PNRA–C. Dangoisse