Monterey Bay Aquarium

Love Begins

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ojovivo
hello vonnie
Peter Solarz
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Today's Document
Cosmic Funnies
almost home

tannertan36

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Keni
taylor price

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NASA

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dirt enthusiast
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

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@cherryvie
Sirens by the Sea by Victor Karlovich Shtemberg (19th Century)
moon and rainbow at sunrise by mark ham
I love learning things like this
mateo.zielonka
Character Moodboards // Queen of Hearts
Off with her head!
(requested by @lovelyllamasblog)
Revive this idea, Disney! This could be the next Monster High/Ever After High!
Obviously they have the Disney princess line, but expanding it to more female characters makes it even MORE profitable. Imagine a lot of the original voice actors returning for this! I can't recall if it was just a short or an actual series, but I'd be happy for a high-budget miniseries! NGL, it kinda exists in my Kingdom Hearts headcanon. (BTW the top right pic is from a jigsaw puzzle; it's not actually concept art, but it's titled Disney princess Academy, so I count it!)
Reminds me of this lol
Many of Hine’s most evocative photos were taken in some of the most dangerous places for kids to work: coal mines.
“Breaker boys” worked to sort coal from other minerals as it came out of the mine. It was dangerous — the sharp, slick coal would cut the boys’ hands, and the fast-moving conveyor belts would often sever the boys’ fingers or take off their hands. There actually were state laws regulating the minimum age of breaker boys, but they were frequently ignored.
These breaker boys worked in a mine in Pennsylvania:
Hine managed to capture not just the grime and danger of child labor, but the monotony of it, too. Here’s Vance, a “trapper boy” in a coal mine, whose job was to sit on a bench all day and occasionally open and close this door:
The haunting photographs of Lewis Hine