The South Pole of Jupiter
(Image credit: NASA / SwRI / MSSS / Kootenay Nature Photos © CC NC SA)
Mike Driver
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Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
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The South Pole of Jupiter
(Image credit: NASA / SwRI / MSSS / Kootenay Nature Photos © CC NC SA)
Russian deep sea fisherman becomes online hit after revealing bizarre catches
1. Frilled Shark 2. Unidentified, possibly a stoplight loosejaw, a deep-sea dragonfish from the genus Malacosteus 3. Chimaera 4. Black Scabbardfish 5. Sea Spider 6. Grenadier or Rattail Fish 7. Unidentified 8. Anglerfish, species unidentified 9. Chimaera 10. Thorny skate ***A note about the “unidentified” photos since there’s been some confusion. This simply means the owner of the Twitter account who posted them did not specify what they are and I could not confirm the species myself from the photos alone. They are by no means unidentified by science. Most of these are fairly common inadvertent catches for commercial fishermen.
***Another note: the change in pressure from the deep sea to the surface is not normally what kills these animals, but rather the change in temperature from the deep water to the warm waters of the surface. (x)
toilet trouble
What looks to be a face in the Northern Lights above Iceland [590x350] Photographed by Tom Mackie http://space-pics.tumblr.com/
I had one of these when I was a kid.
Freestyle fatcap
I Origins (Mike Cahill, 2014).
Valles Marineris, Mars