wallpapers i've made so far but they're in one place :P
also these :3 i dunno what to call these. they aren't icons or wallpapers so

seen from Thailand

seen from Thailand
seen from Portugal
seen from China
seen from France
seen from Thailand
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Indonesia
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from Netherlands
seen from Sweden

seen from United States

seen from Sweden

seen from Russia
seen from United Kingdom
seen from India
seen from United States
seen from Belgium
seen from United States
wallpapers i've made so far but they're in one place :P
also these :3 i dunno what to call these. they aren't icons or wallpapers so
My au doodles hehehhe >:3
The Largest Known Flower Preserved in Amber
Almost 40 million years ago a flower bloomed in a Baltic conifer forest. Dripping tree resin encased the petals and pollen, forever showcasing an ephemeral moment in our planet’s past.
Scientists have taken a fresh look at the unique amber fossil, which was first documented in 1872 as belonging to a pharmacist called Kowalewski in what’s now Kaliningrad, Russia.
The striking fossil had been languishing largely forgotten in the collection of the Federal Institute for Geosciences and Natural Resources in Berlin (BGR), according to Eva-Maria Sadowski, a postdoctoral researcher at the Museum für Naturkunde, Berlin’s natural history museum, and author of the new study.
She said she heard about the fossilized flower, officially known as specimen X4088, in passing from a retired colleague, who she thought was exaggerating.
“He told me that he once visited the BGR and that (he) saw the most amazing and largest amber flower in their collection. I was not aware that they had an amber collection. So I asked the curator of the BGR collection if I could come to see their collection – and there I found the specimen X4088,” she said via email.
“I was more than surprised to see such a large flower inclusion.”
At 28 millimeters (1.1 inches) across, it’s the largest known flower to be fossilized in amber – three times the size of similar fossils.
Sadowski extracted and examined pollen from the amber. She found that the flower had been misidentified when it was first studied.
“The original genus name of this specimen was Stewartia of the plant family Theaceae. But we could show in our study that this was not correct, mainly based on the pollen morphology. But when the specimen was first studied in the 19th century, they (had) not discovered or studied the pollen,” she said.
The flower is closely related to a genus of flowering plants common in Asia today known as Symplocos – shrubs or trees that sport white or yellow flowers.
Originally named Stewartia kowalewskii, the authors propose a new name for the flower of Symplocos kowalewskii.
By Katie Hunt.
Ferdinand Bauer | Illustrationes florae Novae Hollandiae, London, 1989, limited facsimile edition, no. 27 of 35
Ferdinand Bauer (1760-1826) went as an artist of natural history on the coastal survey of New Holland, under the command of Captain Flinders of the HMS Investigator. Robert Brown was the naturalist on this expedition, and both he and Bauer went on the recommendation and at the expense of Sir Joseph Banks. In 1803, after the Investigator was condemned as unseaworthy, Captain Flinders decided to return to England to obtain another ship to complete the expedition. Bauer and Brown, however, continued their travels in Australia, and finally returned to England in 1805 with several thousands of botanical specimens and many hundreds of sketches of plants. In 18[06] Bauer began to publish his Illustrationes florae Novae Hollandiae, a work which did not meet with sufficient encouragement to be continued after the third number' (Henrey 2:195). Ferdinand Bauer's elder brother, Franz Andreas, later explained that the project was abandoned due to Ferdinand's inability to find competent engravers and colourists to complete it, forcing Ferdinand's return to his native Austria. According to Stafleu, fewer than fifty copies were published.
If you're lost you can look and you will find me
Time after time
If you fall I will catch you, I will be waiting
Time after time