If you do not live in America I find that incredibly intriguing
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If you do not live in America I find that incredibly intriguing
Do you see that cloud? Nothing has ever looked like that in the history of ever.
I realise again and again just how easily entertained I am. I'm like a 4 year old. Something catches my interest and I'm just fucking fascinated. I'm fascinated and like completely distracted. Give me a slinky and I'll just sit on the ground and play with it for at least 15 min if I can.
I can write with the back of my pen on my iPad
Scientists have assumed that rising temperatures or high concentrations of carbon dioxide primarily caused the "dwarfing" phenomenon in mammals during this period. New research led by Ross Secord of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and Jonathan Bloch of the Florida Museum of Natural History at the University of Florida offers evidence of the cause-and-effect relationship between temperature and body size. Their findings also provide clues to what might happen to animals in the near future from global warming. In a paper published in this week's issue of the journal Science, Secord, Bloch and colleagues used measurements and geochemical composition of fossil mammal teeth to document a progressive decrease in Sifrhippus' body size that correlates very closely to temperature change over a 130,000-year span. "It is little realized that with the increased warmth associated with the modern increased CO2 greenhouse effect, it is known that in deep time the concomitant reduction in available oxygen ~50 million years ago led to a reduction in body size of animal life," says H. Richard Lane, program director in the National Science Foundation's (NSF) Division of Earth Sciences, which funded the research. "What does that say about the future for Earth's animals?"
http://nsf.gov/news/news_summ.jsp?cntn_id=123252&org=NSF&from=news#top
I should really stop watching depressing documentaries. But some of them are so fascinating.
I've only been living in my house for a week and I've already seen so much 'wildlife'