To celebrate #MoleDay here is the Ashmole mole :)
MS. Ashmole 1511 (The Ashmole Bestiary), folio 36r. England, early 13th c. Illuminated manuscript on vellum.
Bodleian Libraries
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To celebrate #MoleDay here is the Ashmole mole :)
MS. Ashmole 1511 (The Ashmole Bestiary), folio 36r. England, early 13th c. Illuminated manuscript on vellum.
Bodleian Libraries
Happy Mole Day everyone!
I should wear my Mole Day shirt today
six fucking hours spent on this little [$!$!]
(Happy early Mole Day)
School can genuinely be draining, man. I just wanna be autistic about stick figures, why do I gotta do a project abt MOLES TOT
anyways I'm gonna redraw this scene, trust
since I'm forced to use the schools chromebook I made this acc.
don't want any teacher seeing my actual account.
I fear they couldn't handle me at my most unmedicated
On this October 23, 2024, Cookie wishes you an exponential mole day! (Note - this day celebrates mole as in Avogadro's number in the study of chemistry, with one mole being 6.02 x 10^23)
Happy Mole Day!
Today is a special holiday—Mole Day. Mole Day is an informal holiday that originated among North American chemists, chemistry students, and chemistry enthusiasts. People celebrate this chemistry-specific festival between 6:02 AM and 6:02 PM on October 23rd. A mole is a common unit in chemistry, and one mole of a substance contains several basic particles equal to Avogadro's number. In the American date format, the celebration time of Mole Day is written as 6:02 10/23, which looks very similar to Avogadro's number 6.02×10²³, hence the birth of this holiday. Moreover, the word "mole" in English also refers to a "mole (animal)", so the mole is used as the mascot of the holiday. Many high schools in the United States, South Africa, Australia, Canada, and other places celebrate Mole Day, where various activities related to chemistry or moles are held to stimulate students' interest in chemistry.