+Bonus

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
we're not kids anymore.

Origami Around
NASA

Janaina Medeiros
wallacepolsom

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Keni

★

PR's Tumblrdome
RMH
d e v o n
noise dept.
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

titsay

shark vs the universe

pixel skylines
occasionally subtle

ellievsbear

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@butitdidnotlastlong
+Bonus
Oh we’re performing behaviours are we? We’re acting in ways??
I knew I loved Tom Hardy for a reason
Tom hardy is a fucking mood
Today in ‘guess we didn’t learn anything as a species’, someone’s 3D-printed the throat of an Egyptian priest to see what his voice sounded like. The cute thing is that in doing so, they actually fulfilled his wish - as indicated on his sarcophagus. The less cute thing is do we want to accidentally raise a 5000-yo demon? Because that’s how you raise a 5000-yo demon.
Putting aside the joke that “it’s old and Egyptian therefore it must be evil”, this is amazing:
It is believed to be the first project of its kind to successfully recreate the voice of a dead person through artificial means. In the future, the researchers hope to use computer models to recreate full sentences in Nesyamun’s voice.
#please i’m begging you please realise how awesome this is#instead of making mummy jokes#yes it’s funny but this wasn’t an eeeevil demonic entity#this was a real human man who lived 3000 years ago#his name was nesyamun and he was a priest#a *person*#and now we can hear his voice
“Archaeology professor John Schofield, also of the University of York, told the BBC it was Nesyamun’s “express wish” to be heard in the afterlife, which was part of his religious belief system.
“It’s actually written on his coffin - it was what he wanted,” Prof Schofield said. “In a way, we’ve managed to make that wish come true.““
This is amazing!!! And mind-boggling! I just… wow!
If grandmothers around the world had a rallying cry, it would probably sound something like “You need to eat!”
Photographer Gabriele Galimberti’s grandmother said something similar to him before one of his many globetrotting work trips. To ensure he had at least one good meal, she prepared for him a dish of ravioli before he departed on one of his adventures.
“In that occasion I said to my grandma ‘You know, Grandma, there are many other grandmas around the world and most of them are really good cooks,” Galimberti wrote via email. “I’m going to meet them and ask them to cook for me so I can show you that you don’t have to be worried for me and the food that I will eat!’ This is the way my project was born!”
The project, “Delicatessen With Love”, took Galimberti to 58 countries where he photographed grandmothers with both the ingredients and finished signature dishes.
He acted as photographer and stylist during each shoot with the grandmothers, taking a portrait of both the women and the food they made for him.
From top to bottom:
Inara Runtule, 68, Kekava, Latvia. Silke (herring with potatoes and cottage cheese). Grace Estibero, 82, Mumbai, India. Chicken vindaloo.
Susann Soresen, 81, Homer, Alaska. Moose steak.
Serette Charles, 63, Saint-Jean du Sud, Haiti. Lambi in creole sauce.
The photographer’s grandmother Marisa Batini, 80, Castiglion Fiorentino, Italy. Swiss chard and ricotta Ravioli with meat sauce.
Normita Sambu Arap, 65, Oltepessi (Masaai Mara), Kenya. Mboga and orgali (white corn polenta with vegetables and goat).
Julia Enaigua, 71, La Paz, Bolivia. Queso Humacha (vegetables and fresh cheese soup).
Fifi Makhmer, 62, Cairo, Egypt. Kuoshry (pasta, rice and legumes pie).
Isolina Perez De Vargas, 83, Mendoza, Argentina. Asado criollo (mixed meats barbecue).
Bisrat Melake, 60, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Enjera with curry and vegetables.
here’s the updated link, the project is now called “in her kitchen”
Gervais unleashed
Accidentally swallows the coin I was buried with and gets left on the dock for eternity because I couldn't pay the ferryman
Are ancient greek burial rites too niche for notes I'm sorry
quick photo study, trying couple things with the brushwork. follow my instagram! https://www.instagram.com/algenpfleger/
I am… questions about
I fucken LOVE that surreal picture
This made it even better
This is arT
“(The itch to ask whether I’m still loved; and the itch to say, I love you, half-fearing that the other has forgotten, since the last time I said it.)”
— Susan Sontag, As Consciousness is Harnessed to Flesh
working full time is terrible why do we just accept that having 8 days off a month is normal and okay........ being alive could be cool but we waste it at our JOBS.... sorry i’m just heated about capitalism again i’ll be fine
8 days....never thought about it like that 😓
This seems really whiny to me. Like, I agree with you, work sucks, but our ancestors didn’t get to browse tumblr at their desks or have the option to gleefully spend their ENTIRE WEEKENDS horizontal on the couch stuffing their faces/watching tv/playing video games/wacking off. They didn’t have weekends. They just slaved away as fucking peasants from dawn to dusk until they died in childbirth or got the consumption.
I am perfectly happy working 8 hrs a day because I don’t have to:
grow my own food
find my own clean water
heat my house
shit in the woods
Hi, I study social and cultural anthropology. Humans working 40+ hours a week is 100% an industrial revolution thing and was not normal in the early stages of our existence. In fact, hunter and gatherer societies that still exist to this day spend about 15-20 hours a week TOPS working. The rest is dedicated to sitting around and telling stories and jokes, dancing, singing, eating, sleeping, fucking and so forth. Read a damn book.
Medieval peasants lived grueling, terrible lives. But their vacation days beat out the policies now common even in progressive societies.
He doesn’t even know, and he doesn’t want to.
I don't go here but I feel like "It's a metaphor. Don't force it to do the work of a fact." is a great statement about literature and fan-content in general.