Starting an ink journal to keep track of my observations as I try various inks. Because I'm me, I had to color code it. #fountainpen #ink #journal
Show & Tell
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
Keni
will byers stan first human second
taylor price
art blog(derogatory)
trying on a metaphor

pixel skylines
Cosmic Funnies
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❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Not today Justin
i don't do bad sauce passes
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I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
DEAR READER
noise dept.
dirt enthusiast

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

Kiana Khansmith
seen from Iraq
seen from Iraq
seen from United States

seen from Iraq
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seen from Thailand
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@aerognome
Starting an ink journal to keep track of my observations as I try various inks. Because I'm me, I had to color code it. #fountainpen #ink #journal
Went #hiking Sunday in #stauntonstatepark. Great overlooks, lovely wildflowers, ironic signage! #colorado #optoutside (at Staunton State Park - Colorado Parks and Wildlife)
Spent a good chunk of the evening turning leftover cabbage into #kachka's "lazy" cabbage rolls variation. The end result tasted spectacular. If I had a babushka, I think she'd be proud.
Testing out new (to me) techniques for #fluidart #fluiddynamics #rayleightaylorinstability
I used extra paint to make this little guy, which I think I like even more than the other! We'll see how they dry. #fluidart #fluiddynamics #rayleightaylorinstability
I refilled my soap dispenser and it went all Rayleigh-Taylor instability on me. The old soap must be lighter than the new stuff! #fluiddynamics #physics
A rare moment of sunshine on a very cold, windy day of #skiing. #winterpark #toomuchtraversing (at Winter Park Resort)
Damn, this is so good
OMGGG
These are all fantastic, but the guy modelling MLK is especially spectacular. Awesome project!
A scientists march on Washington is being planned
The responsible application of science to government
Twitter: @ScienceMarchDC Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1862739727343189/ Reddit: /r/scientistsmarch Get Email Updates To help: https://goo.gl/forms/zAdY02dBEz3Ykii42 Contact: [email protected]
We accept the following as provisionally true:
The Earth is becoming warmer due to human action.
The diversity of life arose by evolution.
An American government that ignores science to pursue ideological agendas threatens not only the environment of which humans are a part, but America itself.
Scientific research in the United States is underfunded.
Politicians who devalue expertise risk making decisions that do not reflect reality.
Who can participate:
Science is a methodology and a way of thinking. Anyone who uses and values these tools for understanding the world, not just professional scientists, may participate.
How can I help?
We are still in the very early stages of organizing this event. We need all the help we can get, especially from people with expertise in the following areas:
Web Design
Logo/Graphic design
Law, incorporation of a not-for-profit
Fundraising
Public relations and media relations
Social media management
Organizing large events
Acquiring permits in DC
Contacts with possible speakers
You don’t need to be a professional scientist to participate!
If you are a scientist and want to run for office you should!
COUNT ME IN
Always in for science!
The view in Denver's Civic Center Park on Saturday for the #womensmarch #womensmarchdenver💖 (at Denver's Civic Center Park)
A required read from Michael Oman-Reagan.
This is all true. This all happened in Canada, and its very likely it will happen in the USA under Trump and be worse than Harper’s crackdown on Science ever was.
Links cited in this twitter essay:
The Big Chill: “Scientists Can’t Do the Job They Were Hired to Do”
More than 1000 Jobs Lost, Climate Program Hit Hard in Coming Environment Canada Cuts
Leaked document says Canadian federal climate scientists being blocked from media contact
Harper Government Trashes Another Federal Science Library
Federal scientists closely monitored during polar conference
Science Silenced: US Scientist Caught in Canadian Muzzle Climate-change scientists feel ‘muzzled’ by Ottawa: Documents
The Canadian War on Science: A long, unexaggerated, devastating chronological indictment
http://ourrighttoknow.ca/
http://write2know.ca/
https://evidencefordemocracy.ca
So important that we made a video on the topic: https://youtu.be/8e1XX-ngJcc
This is pretty overwhelming - take some time, get through a few of these articles.
Reblogged for later reading and referencing.
Women’s March around the world [January 21, 2016]
I’m one of those awesome dots in Denver! :)
Everyone loves rainbow highlighters. They make you look like a beautiful pixie who fronts a glam-rock band. Also, white nationalism is a cancer on our democracy. Women are capable of holding both of these truths in their minds, and prioritizing them accordingly.
Sady Doyle, “The true story of how Teen Vogue got mad, got woke, and began terrifying men like Donald Trump”
I don’t know how I feel about rainbow highlighters, but I love this sentiment right here. Great article on how women’s media can and should mix the political with more stereotypically “female stuff”. Also I MISS YOU, THE TOAST.
You’ve heard of Drunk History, now get ready for...Drunk Science!
Reblog with your drink of choice and the science topic you’d rant about. For example: whisky sours and human decomposition.
Scotch and animal communication.
Bourbon or a caipirinha and conservation bio.
rum with mango juice and entomology
Craft beer and the biological process of fermentation.
Scotch on the rocks and geophysical methods for archaeology.
tequila and volcanoes
Bourbon and the cytoskeleton but honestly it’d just be me yelling about how dumb all of science is
Rieslings and pathophysiology
Flavored vodka and marine invertebrates
irish whiskey and symbiosis
Jamison (drinking right now!) and mitochondria!
Wine or gin and tonics and- and- omg I wish we could do a drunk Brain Scoop episode
Bourbon and fluid dynamics. Naturally. Although I have definitely spent New Year’s Eve telling people all about the physics of champagne.
Artist and scientist Jill Pelto hopes to inspire people to take action by imbuing her dreamy paintings with hard scientific data and field research.
I posted an article, and some images, several months ago of Jill Pelto’s art. But this article has some new art. It’s worth a repeat. Here’s some of her art. Link into the article to read her story.
Little side note to give this post some context. Over the weekend, I participated in a climate change research seminar and field work studying joshua trees and piñon pines in Joshua Tree National Park. Dr. Cameron Barrows, who is one of the lead researchers on the effects on climate change in the desert environment, was doing his usual lecture, showing us data and charts and graphs. But he inserted a poem into his presentation, written by a woman from England who did some citizen-scientist work in Joshua Tree National Park earlier this year. She came into the research perceiving the desert to be a horrible, desolate place with no life. She left with a 180 degree turn, and wrote a poem about what she then realized a desert to be, as a place full of life. Dr. Barrows told us, completely correctly, that art can add a gloss to science that we all need to appreciate the science.
‘Landscape of Change’ was painted using data about sea level rise, glacier volume decline, increasing global temperatures and the rise in fossil fuel usage. (Photo: Jill Pelto)
‘Habitat Degradation: Arctic Melt’ depicts Arctic sea ice data from 1980 to present. (Photo: Jillian Pelto)
‘Habitat Degradation: Deforestation’ depicts the plight of tigers using data showing the decline in rainforest area from 1970 to 2010. (Photo: Jillian Pelto)
‘Increasing Forest Fire Activity’ uses global temperature rise information to illustrate how harsh drought conditions affect forested regions. (Photo: Jillian Pelto)
'Salmon Population Decline’ draws population data from the Coho salmon of the North Pacific. (Photo: Jillian Pelto)
'Decrease in Glacier Mass Balance’ uses data from a group of North Cascade, WA glaciers from 1980-2014. (Photo: Jillian Pelto)
'Habitat Degradation: Ocean Acidification’ depicts the decreasing pH (meaning increasing acidity) in oceans from 1998 to 2012. (Photo: Jillian Pelto)
Oh, wow. Talk about data visualization.
This is one of the coolest data visualization ideas I’ve ever seen.
Loving the veins in these leaves. #harvard #cambridgema (at Harvard University)