Oh, hey. I brought you something.
RMH
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i don't do bad sauce passes
Game of Thrones Daily
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
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Stranger Things
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
todays bird
cherry valley forever
Peter Solarz

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oozey mess
Cosimo Galluzzi
dirt enthusiast
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if i look back, i am lost

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blake kathryn

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seen from China
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@basileiaromaion
Oh, hey. I brought you something.
God I am sick and tired of people uwu-washing indigenous American history.
Did the Inca have exquisite building techniques, efficient messengers, and quality waterworks? Yes. They were also an expansionist empire built on violent conquest and the splitting up and relocating of conquered peoples.
Did the Aztecs have a gorgeous capital city built at the heart of a lake, with floating farms and towering temples honoring their fascinating pantheon? Yes. Guess what tho. They were also a violent expansionist empire who practiced ritual sacrifice of prisoners of war.
The Iroquois confederacy had one of the most unique representative political systems I’ve ever heard of, with women taking a forefront in most local government matters too. But their internal peace allowed them to redirect violence to their neighbors, as so often happens with tribal confederations, and they eventually violently conquered the Ohio valley and destroyed or displaced dozens of other indigenous groups.
Even my beloved Cahokia has the graves of sacrifice victims amidst its ruins.
A society should not need to be (and fundamentally cannot be) squeaky clean unproblematically stannable in order to be worth studying and remembering, and pretending that they were is no less disinformative than the European accounts painting them as godless savages.
also not all of them had better sanitation and/or medical knowledge than Europeans of the same era. the Europeans were also human beings with human intelligence and observation skills! the American indigenous people also lacked modern technology and health advancements!
they don't have to have invented Purell and wifi millennia early- and the Europeans don't have to have been wading through human feces in their streets -for violent colonialism to be wrong
21 FILMS OF THE 21ST CENTURY Mad Max: Fury Road (2015) dir. George Miller
i think it’s really important to know everyone’s favourite colour idk why some people left that in primary school
reply / rb in the tags with your favourite colour
GERARD DUBOIS Moby Dick
this is legendary because you as you go you see the photo itself and you’re “oh this is some symbolic / surrealist art” and then the TITLE hits you like a shotgun shell
In case you were unaware, Moby Dick is one of the foundational texts of cosmic horror. The White Whale is a god, maybe even The God. And Ahab Hates Him.
Colores Latine Colours in Latin
The two glauci there aren’t a mistake.
losing my fucking mind over this subreddit
can’t believe someone would make this post without including the best one
every squad has the:
the smasher
the smasher
asbestos
the smasher
the wild card
It's just very important to me that you know prairie-style gardens exist.
Ok. Thank you. Carry on.
Go off, Muse, of unhinged Achilles,
who cost the Greeks so many Ls,
yeeted souls of dank heroes
into Hades' dark,
Begin with the how Agamemnon--
CEO of men--
deadass canceled the main character.
I am awaited. I am awaited in Valhalla! MAD MAX: FURY ROAD (2015) dir. George Miller
List of Books to Read Before You Die
1. Any book you want
2. Don’t read books you don’t want to read
3. That’s it
4. Congratulations you did it
I really like this list. All my favorite books are on it.
Thanks I worked really hard on it
Do we know anything about the historical context that allowed Venice to come up with something like the Arsenal? Most accounts kind of treat it as this de Novo idea to mass produce ships, but I feel like history never actually works like that, and Carthaginians were doing that 1,500 years earlier. Were there trends going on elsewhere in Europe and the Mediterranean world that contributed to this industrial breakthrough? Do we know anything about the specific administrators who had to plan this seeming quantum leap in production out? Did a bunch of folks immediately see what the Venetians were doing and copy it? If not, why?
I'm going to take a slightly broader take on this question: the assembly line is not an invention, it's a discovery. So it's not about who did it first, because you have lots of cases of independent discoveries happening in wildly disparate times and places.
I remember quite vividly a talk given by Professor Anthony Barbieri-Low when he first arrived at UCSB, where he argued that the assembly line was first discovered in China...during the Bronze Age. As early as the Shang and Zhou dynasties around 1000 BCE, we have evidence of assembly line techniques being used in the production of bronze and pottery, because the pieces were inscribed on the bottom with indications of which worker did which parts of the process and which quality inspector signed off on the piece as good enough for sale - so that if the thing broke, officials could figure out exactly who to blame for shoddy work.
So it's not that Venice was the first to ever adopt the idea of assembly line manufacture of ships, but rather that they did it more consistently and devoted more resources to it than anyone else, and iteratively improved on the techniques to get production times down to a single day per galley.
The Arsenal of Venice was an enormous complex, roughly 15% of Venice's landmass, surrounded by a two-mile long defensive wall, and employing some 16,000 people. In addition to standardized pre-fabricated parts, the Arsenal also emphasized division of labor with workshops devoted to producing everything a warship might need in-house - rope, rigging, masts, planking, sails, nails, guns, etc. Organizing these supply chains, what we might call vertical integration, was an incredible logistical feat in and of itself.
In terms of technology, the Arsenal pioneered frame-first (as opposed to hull-first) construction, a moving assembly line whereby galleys were floated down a canal to different stages of the production process, new forms of firearms, and new kinds of ships llike the galleass and galleon. Galileo was a major consultant to the Arsenal at the height of its power.
In addition to the technical advancements, all of this required a lot of money - roughly 10% of the Republic's entire budget - and what made Venice truly unique was its ability to devote those kind of resources on a regular basis at a time when even powerful empires like the Ottomans and the Spanish were still using the yo-yoing methods of medieval fleet construction.
Crowley Lake, CA
TIL that this place exists
They look like something man-made … but they’re not.
Wikipedia says:
The pillars were simply regarded as oddities until 2015 when geologists from UC Berkeley realized that they were the result of frigid water from melting snow seeping down into volcanic ash (the result of a catastrophic eruption more than 760,000 years prior), creating tiny holes in the hot ash, the byproduct being boiling water and steam, which then rose up, creating convection cells, which later filled with minerals more resistant to erosion than the surrounding volcanic ash.
Samples of the resulting “evenly spaced convection cells similar to heat pipes” were analyzed […] with the UC Berkeley researchers finding that minute crevices in these “convection pipes” were bonded in place by minerals that were able to resist the erosion of the lake’s waves.
Researchers have counted nearly 5,000 of these pillars, which appear in groups and vary widely in shape, size, and color over an area of 4,000 acres (1,600 ha) […]
So yeah, massive explosion, big eruption, cover the area with ash, and then water seeping down and boiling back off from the sheer heat of the cooling eruption created them.
Photos yanked from CaliforniaThroughMyLense.
Earth is so fucking cool.
Which of these common (i think) interests were you most passionate about as a kid?
Dinosaurs
Space
Trucks/Cars
Horses
One Specific Animal
none of these/"You forgot (interest)"
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A compilation of stuff I know about drawing Asian faces and Asian culture! I feel like many “How-To-Draw” tutorials often default to European faces and are not really helpful when drawing people of other races. So I thought I’d put this together in case anyone is interested! Feel free to share this guide and shoot me questions if you have any! I’m by no means an expert, I just know a few things from drawing experience and from my own cultural background.
chinese suzhou garden by 橘涂初四