All but one of the pumpkins carved at Chateau Beth (couldn't fit it in the square format).Thanks to the awesome organization We Love Long Beach #welovelb #pumpkinlb
DEAR READER

Janaina Medeiros
wallacepolsom
$LAYYYTER

roma★
Today's Document
Peter Solarz

Kiana Khansmith
One Nice Bug Per Day
Sade Olutola
sheepfilms
Sweet Seals For You, Always

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Not today Justin

Kaledo Art
Mike Driver
we're not kids anymore.

Discoholic 🪩
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
occasionally subtle
seen from Brazil

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@blackmere
All but one of the pumpkins carved at Chateau Beth (couldn't fit it in the square format).Thanks to the awesome organization We Love Long Beach #welovelb #pumpkinlb
The top image is a photograph of a lush rainforest canopy. The bottom image colors each tree based on its species.
How? It’s all thanks to a special lab built by ecologist Greg Asner inside a twin-turboprop airplane. From a few thousand feet up, the Carnegie Airborne Observatory uses lasers, spectrometers and other instruments to build a detailed 3-D model of a forest, identify different species of vegetation and quantify carbon sequestration. It’s a lot quicker than tramping through the jungle and taking these measurements on foot.
A fun tidbit from the full story: "On one occasion, he and his team mapped more than 6,500 square miles of the Colombian Amazon at night — about the size of Connecticut plus Rhode Island — flying with all their lights out to avoid being shot at by the FARC, the Colombian rebel force.”
Images: Greg Asner, Carnegie Airborne Observatory
Interesting and beautiful
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