flea and john
Misplaced Lens Cap
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KIROKAZE
Jules of Nature
Cosmic Funnies

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Discoholic 🪩
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Origami Around

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hello vonnie
trying on a metaphor
Cosimo Galluzzi

@theartofmadeline
todays bird
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Monterey Bay Aquarium
Not today Justin
Today's Document
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@errlgrey
flea and john
“Travel isn’t always pretty. It isn’t always comfortable. Sometimes it hurts, it even breaks your heart. But that’s okay. The journey changes you; it should change you. It leaves marks on your memory, on your consciousness, on your heart, and on your body. You take something with you. Hopefully you leave something good behind.” Anthony Bourdain ( June 25th 1956 - June 8th 2018 )
Aerial of the Great Salt Lake in Utah.Photograph by Paul Zahl, National Geographic
by Carpenter, Frances, 1890-1972
Pink Custom Shop Fender Stratocaster
The most colorful thing in this picture is Jimi’s smile
Crescent
Astronaut Anton Shkaplerov captured this shot of Tortuga Island in the Galapagos from the International Space Station earlier this month. The name “Tortuga” is given to a number of islands and features such as bays around the world – it translates to “Turtle” and is given to this island because of the tortoises that lived on it. The island is obviously an old, eroding volcanic crater. It is considered a “Tuff ring”, made mostly of palagonite, an altered igneous rock formed when molten rock interacts with water and explodes. Molten rock rose up in the center of this feature, interacted with seawater, and triggered explosions that threw material outwards, forming the tuff ring.
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The largest and most powerful hurricanes ever recorded on Earth spanned over 1,000 miles across with winds gusting up to around 200 mph. That’s wide enough to stretch across nearly all U.S. states east of Texas. But even that kind of storm is dwarfed by the Great Red Spot, a gigantic storm in Jupiter. There, gigantic means twice as wide as Earth.
With tumultuous winds peaking at about 400 mph, the Great Red Spot has been swirling wildly over Jupiter’s skies for the past 150 years—maybe even much longer than that. While people saw a big spot in Jupiter as early as they started stargazing through telescopes in the 1600s, it is still unclear whether they were looking at a different storm. Today, scientists know the Great Red Spot is there and it’s been there for a while, but they still struggle to learn what causes its swirl of reddish hues.
Image credit: NASA/JPL
Healed butterfly on the neck of my friend @patrykhilton 🔗 @sangbleutattoolondon - for bookings: [email protected] - #ttt #blkttt #tttism #tattooing #blacktattooing #contemporarytattooing #london #zurich #floraltattoo #engravingtattoo #medievaltattoo #sacredgeometry #geometrictattoo
NASA just posted this: Rose-Colored Jupiter, captured by Juno.