d e v o n

Andulka
Stranger Things
Peter Solarz

No title available

No title available

JBB: An Artblog!

PR's Tumblrdome
art blog(derogatory)

Love Begins
TVSTRANGERTHINGS

titsay

Kiana Khansmith

JVL
Xuebing Du
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

★
sheepfilms
almost home
Game of Thrones Daily
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Croatia
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from Germany
seen from Norway
seen from Jordan
seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from Bulgaria

seen from Croatia

seen from Argentina

seen from Indonesia
seen from Uruguay

seen from Peru

seen from Peru
seen from Peru
seen from T1
@kuraihasu
Crown jellyfishes are the six families of true jellyfish that belong to the order Coronatae. They are distinguished from other jellyfish by the presence of a deep groove running around the umbrella, giving them the crown shape from which they take their name.
Narwhal, temporarily trapped amid shifting ice. (x)
Greetings from 7,000 feet
Soundcolors
joshua lambus dives three to five miles out from hawaii’s big island at night, dropping about sixty feet below the surface, sans tether, with another ten thousand vertigo inducing feet below him, in order photograph these light sensitive pelagic animals.
in what is the largest migration of any group of animals on the planet, thousands of these creatures, who live in total darkness during the day, make their way to the surface at night, where they can absorb more oxygen or feed in the more nutrient dense waters.
though many of these species have never been seen before or identified, lambus considers the fourth photo to be his favourite, which, after three years of inquiry, he learned shows an octopus that has torn off the poisonous tentacles of a portugese man of war (featured here) so to ward of its own would be predators.
please like/reblog if you save or use it
A Japanese paradise flycatcher feeding its baby. This migratory species is suspected to be in moderately rapid decline as a result of habitat degradation and loss on its wintering grounds.
Egg-case of Argonemertes australiensis, terrestrial nemertean worm.
Photo credit Andy Murray (he had lots of great photos of tiny friends)
Caterpillar of Saturniidae Moth
by Marco Fisher