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My print shop: INPRNT
Monterey Bay Aquarium

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art blog(derogatory)
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izzy's playlists!

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@jueny
Clover and daisy
My print shop: INPRNT
could you draw a (cave) olm.... big noodle
Julia Soboleva, “Fireflies”
Cover those dogs
textures / marion bay, tasmania
晴れた日
sunny day
Moeritherium lyonsi
Moeritherium ("Lake Moeris' beast") is an extinct genus of basal proboscideans from the Eocene of North and West Africa. The first specimen was discovered in strata from the Fayum fossil deposits of Egypt. It was named in 1901 by Charles William Andrews, who suggested that it was an early proboscidean, perhaps ancestral to mastodons, although subsequent workers considered it everything from a relative of manatees to a close relative of both clades' common ancestor. Currently, Moeritherium is seen as a proboscidean that, while fairly basal, diverged before the split between elephantiforms and deinotheres. Seven species have been named, though five (M. andrewsi, M. chehbeurameuri, M. gracile, M. lyonsi, and M. trigodon) are currently considered valid. The name comes from Lake Moeris, and the Ancient Greek θηρίον (thēríon), meaning "beast"… (Wikipedia)
Artwork by Julia Soares D´Oliveira
Me umbreller
Mexican Mole Lizard (Bipes biporus), family Bipedidae, Baja California Sur, México
photograph by Angel Marquez
Morning Doodle (Pencil, Pencil crayons, Paper, Post-its, Ps)
quick photo study
generations
Cuckoo and Azaleas, by Katsushika Hokusai, 1828
European mole emerging from a molehill
Arterra/Contributor/Getty
Common mole By: Leonard Lee Rue III From: Nature's Unlovables 1990
Today we have some absolutely incredible photos of a gossamer worm, Tomopteris sp.
Photo Fraser Higgins