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"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

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@knisterklee
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"La Couronne de Toulouse" (The Coronation of Toulouse) located in the Salle des Illustres within the Capitole de Toulouse in France
Mount Etna, Italy by Bernard M
Mia Bergeron (American, 1979) - Star Gatherers (2026)
I saw the cutest quarter at work the other day
Blood Pheasant (Ithaginis cruentus), males, family Phasianidae, order Galliformes, Laojun Mountain, Lijiang, China
photograph by Wild Safari Saga
Flag-footed Bug (genus Anisocelis), a member of the leaf-footed bug family (Coreidae). The “flags” are tibial expansions. They serve several purposes: attract mates, a warning they might be toxic and as a diversion, hoping predators will attack the flags and not the insect.
Sergius Hruby (1869–1943), “Bestial Love”
from ‘Die Muskete’ Vol. 23 #1, January 2, 1928
source
Brahmin Moth or Owl Moth (Brahmaea wallichii)..Pakistan, Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar, China, Taiwan, and Japan... host plants, Ligustrum and common lilac.
Brahmin Moth or Owl Moth (Brahmaea wallichii)..Pakistan, Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar, China, Taiwan, and Japan... host plants, Ligustrum and common lilac.
Stone ship, called Tjelvar’s grave on the island of Gotland, Sweden, dating from the late Bronze Age (1100-500 BC)
The 13th-century Gutasaga saga about the early history of Gotland tells the story of Tjelvar, a mighty hero who tamed the Baltic island. According to this legend, Gotland was once a living creature, and one not in the mood to let people inhabit it. During the night, it would be like any other island, calm and quiet. But once the sun came up it would violently thrash around and sink underwater, taking any visitors along with it into the depths of the sea.
This process repeated itself for many, many years, until one day, Tjelvar made the risky journey to Gotland using just a small rowing boat. He set foot on the island in the dead of night and started a fire, which cleansed the place of evil and pacified the island. Tjelvar became king of Gotland and is known to history as the first person to ever live on Sweden's largest island.
After his long and happy reign, Tjelvar died an old and content man. He was loved by all and buried in a ship-shaped grave. These stone ship burial sites, also called "ship settings" are found throughout Scandinavia and were usually built during the Viking era starting in the late 8th century. But Tjelevar's Grave on Gotland is unique in that it's more than a thousand years older than most stone ships, dating all the way back to the Nordic Bronze Age. Archeologists have dated the burial monument from between 1100 and 500 BC. In the 1930s, several pots were found inside the ship that contained the burned and crushed remains of the person buried there—whoever they may be.
Max Mason, Bottomlands, Big Sky, 2021, Oil on canvas