Ph. Kito Muñoz
Cosimo Galluzzi

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Ph. Kito Muñoz
Seeds and Seed Dispersal. n.d.
Internet Archive
Visit @nobrashfestivity for more GIFs from the same enchanted film here and here
Jumy-M Chrysanthemum / 停滞する準備
Juan Navarro Baldeweg (Spanish, b. 1939), Viento y lluvia II, 1986. Oil on canvas, 200 x 237 cm
Jumy-M Diary vs. Reality / 記憶が保管されている場所
RAMON HAINDL
Corals. The isles of summer, or, Nassau and the Bahamas. 1880. Colorized.
Internet Archive
Reykjavik, 2013
source: unknown
Salman Toor (Pakistani, b. 1983), Bar Boy, 2019. Oil on plywood, 48 x 60 in.
Hung Tung, 1920
©juri
Olivier Robert Cape Eboshi Hokkaido, Japan
Meet the yeti crab, a creature so unusual that a whole new biological family had to be created to classify it. It was found along the Pacific-Antarctic Ridge, 1,500 kilometres south of Easter Island at a depth of 2,200 metres living on hydrothermal vents. As a result of analysis based on morphology and molecular data, the organism was deemed to form a new biological family (Kiwaidae). But, a lot else remains an enigma and much more is to be discovered. We do know that yeti crabs lack pigmentation in the eye and are hence thought to be blind. Also of interest, their fluffy pincers have been discovered to contain filamentous bacteria which may be involved in a chemosynthetic relationship with the organism. It is suggested that these bacteria may detoxify some of the poisonous minerals emanating from the hydrothermal vents. -Jean Photograph by Ifremer A. Fifis
eiichiro sakata