Animal Crossing: New Horizons - Museum Scenery (Fish Exhibit)
official fish post
well there can be no misconception this is a post,, and its about fish
Monterey Bay Aquarium
we're not kids anymore.
Show & Tell
i don't do bad sauce passes

#extradirty

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
ojovivo
No title available
Claire Keane
Game of Thrones Daily

Origami Around
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

ellievsbear
h
Mike Driver
hello vonnie
AnasAbdin
Xuebing Du

Kaledo Art
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

seen from Netherlands

seen from Germany

seen from Canada
seen from Brazil
seen from Germany

seen from Germany
seen from Germany

seen from Germany

seen from Germany

seen from Germany
seen from Germany

seen from Germany
seen from Germany
seen from Germany
seen from Germany
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seen from Germany
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seen from Australia
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@thegooooooooooom
Animal Crossing: New Horizons - Museum Scenery (Fish Exhibit)
official fish post
well there can be no misconception this is a post,, and its about fish
Zira 's lecture
Lessons on seizing power for the youngest
Long-tailed Broadbills (Psarisomus dalhousiae).They are found in forests across the Himalayas, extending through Northeastern India to Southeast Asia.
Extremely cool new dinosaur: Pulaosaurus qinglong
This absolutely gorgeous fossil ornithischian from the mid-to-late Jurassic of China was just described a couple days ago! And beyond just being a beautiful looking specimen, this fossil includes fossilised elements of the larynx!!!
Specifically it had arytenoids, which are parts of the larynx made of cartilage in us mammals but in birds and now apparently ornithischian dinosaurs they were ossified (turned to bone). The authors described them as looking similar to modern birds', suggesting that Pulaosaurus might have been able to make bird-like vocalisations!
It's particularly exciting because it's a second point of data after laryngeal structures were found in the ankylosaur Pinacosaurus a couple years ago. So it's not just ankylosaurs doing some weird unique thing, but a structure that might have been shared by at least all ornithischians!
As far as I'm aware nobody has attempted to figure out what the actual noises could have been, and I'm guessing it's not possible with the amount of material we have. But it does massively expand the range of sounds that we know could have been possible for them, which is exciting enough!!
wow it’s really true…
The Office — 7.20 | “Training Day”
who wants to go to a party tonight?
Long may she reign
avian august day one, the ʻiʻiwi (scarlet honeycreeper)
angry pinecone
The shoulder thing
Photoset to celebrate Marianne utterly destroying the “Female characters can’t have dynamic facial expressions because they should always be ‘pretty’” and the “Women in 3d animation can’t have facial expressions because it’s a limitation of the 3d medium” rules.
When she gets mad, it’s not just a slight pursed lip and slightly angled eyebrows. Her whole face contorts. She juts out her lower jaw, her nose and brow wrinkle, she gets deep lines around her mouth. She actually looks angry and not just “pouty”.
I didn’t have to carefully go frame by frame to find in-between shots where the squash and stretch temporarily and unintentionally distorted his features. These expressions are all purposeful and last multiple frames.
With permission from Jackson Yeoh who did this test animation for the Bog King to showcase his vulnerable side. Audio is sampled from an Alan Cumming interview.
forever grateful i was simply too lazy to let the makeup industrial complex get its hooks in me. I was just like im not doing all of that. in fact. im doing none of that
yeah I have political reasons for it now but my original and still most powerful reason is "I am not getting out of this bed one single second before I have to"
I will NEVER see a prehistoric dinosaur
I will NEVER see an anomalocaris. I will NEVER hold a trilobite. I will NEVER see a dimetrodon or an eight foot long millipede. and I will NEVER see a pterosaur
Well as much as it pains me to say it they died
Sabine’s Gull (Xema sabini), family Laridae, order Charadriiformes, Great Lakes Region, North-central U.S.
photograph by Tim Bowman, USFWS
I will NEVER see a prehistoric dinosaur
I will NEVER see an anomalocaris. I will NEVER hold a trilobite. I will NEVER see a dimetrodon or an eight foot long millipede. and I will NEVER see a pterosaur
Well as much as it pains me to say it they died
Pigeon 3D model, personal project