ITALY. Rome. October 1994. A dinner setting. Steve McCurry
Jules of Nature

ellievsbear
Today's Document

if i look back, i am lost

shark vs the universe
Misplaced Lens Cap

tannertan36

Kiana Khansmith
No title available
styofa doing anything
Cosmic Funnies

JVL
AnasAbdin

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
NASA

Janaina Medeiros
🪼
No title available
ojovivo
will byers stan first human second
seen from Canada

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@6oser
ITALY. Rome. October 1994. A dinner setting. Steve McCurry
Mugler - 90s - Ultimate embodiment of nocturnal noir glamour
The high's starting to wear off. Someone shoot another billionaire CEO
The stained glass at the Elizabethan House Museum, 4 South Quay, Great Yarmouth, 17th - early 18th century - Photo by David King
Candle cake by eatwitharli
me: you literally have a disorder. this is symptoms
me: no perhaps my soul is rotten
'i love boxie' t-shirts with the lines pulled directly out of a story that these t-shirt makers have heard, read, or lived through, circa 2008
(x)
microdosing catholicism by constantly pursuing a sense of guilt for no reason
[runs in soaking wet, panting, out of breath] SALMON HATS ARE BACK! [runs out]
Orcas off the coast of Washington State are balancing dead fish on their heads like it's the 1980s, but researchers still aren't sure why th
Last month, scientists and whale watchers spotted orcas (Orcinus orca) in South Puget Sound and off Point No Point in Washington State swimming with dead fish on their heads.
This is the first time they've donned the bizarre headgear since the summer of 1987, when a trendsetting female West Coast orca kickstarted the behavior for no apparent reason. Within a couple of weeks, the rest of the pod had jumped on the bandwagon and turned salmon corpses into must-have fashion accessories, according to the marine conservation charity ORCA — but it's unclear whether the same will happen this time around.
Researchers think the orcas sporting salmon hats now may be veterans of the trend when it first appeared nearly 40 years ago. "It does seem possible that some individuals that experienced [the behavior] the first time around may have started it again," Andrew Foote, an evolutionary ecologist at the University of Oslo in Norway, told New Scientist.
The motivation for the salmon hat trend remains a mystery. "Honestly, your guess is as good as mine," Deborah Giles, an orca researcher at the University of Washington who also heads the science and research teams at the non-profit Wild Orca, told New Scientist.
Salmon hats are a perfect example of what researchers call a "fad" — a behavior initiated by one or two individuals and temporarily picked up by others before it's abandoned. Back in the 1980s, the trend only lasted a year; by the summer of 1988, dead fish were totally passé and salmon hats disappeared from the West Coast orca population.
Kinoko Shibari
Lorenzo Mattotti
Nobuyoshi Araki: 'Chiro, My Love' (1994)