"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

izzy's playlists!
Monterey Bay Aquarium
RMH
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

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祝日 / Permanent Vacation
Cosimo Galluzzi

JBB: An Artblog!
KIROKAZE
$LAYYYTER

Kiana Khansmith
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
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❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
cherry valley forever

Love Begins

oozey mess
Peter Solarz
tumblr dot com
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@liminal-intertide
hand-sanded shell chokers
AIWA DATA RECORDER DR-2 (1985)
there’s something about the sight of steps leading down into the water. it feels like the ocean telling me to come home
Salmon Cycle
July’s print for print club!
Cover and back cover of "Young Naturalist", March 1976
Gather force from the sea
Big announcement:
Fucking petting hims
May 28, 2000
“Discarded monitor frame” by bryannylin
another hiking sketch
Neptune grass is generally regarded as the most ecologically important seagrass and shallow-water habitat in the Mediterranean Sea. It suffe
From the article:
Neptune grass is generally regarded as the most ecologically important seagrass and shallow-water habitat in the Mediterranean Sea. It suffered a severe decline during the 20th century, and there have been myriad efforts to actively restore it via replanting schemes. A new study points to the merits of a different approach: Remove the human-caused drivers of the decline and let the meadows regrow on their own. The study, published March 5 in the journal Marine Environmental Research, found that following the introduction of stronger environmental regulations and practices in France in the mid-to-late 1980s, Neptune grass (Posidonia oceanica) repopulated sampled sections of the waters off the city of Marseille over the ensuing four decades. “We observed exceptional recovering of the meadow in the Bay of Marseille,” Patrick Astruch, a research engineer at GIS Posidonie and the study’s lead author, told Mongabay. GIS Posidonie is a nonprofit marine research group based on the Aix-Marseille University campus. Astruch called it a “very positive trend” and a lesson in the value of passive restoration, which involves letting seagrass meadows regrow naturally after reducing pollution and other threats.