things to remember in 2016

blake kathryn
Jules of Nature
Monterey Bay Aquarium

PR's Tumblrdome

izzy's playlists!
tumblr dot com
Show & Tell
art blog(derogatory)
YOU ARE THE REASON
No title available
Not today Justin

oozey mess
One Nice Bug Per Day

Product Placement

shark vs the universe
Claire Keane
hello vonnie
almost home

pixel skylines
todays bird
seen from Belgium

seen from Portugal

seen from Malaysia

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from Cyprus
seen from Canada

seen from Spain
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States

seen from Singapore

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
@thomyo
things to remember in 2016
The Horrors at Afisha Picnic festival, Moscow
(this is apparently my fav photo)
The Horrors at Afisha Picnic festival, Moscow
The Horrors at Afisha Picnic festival, Moscow
Latest Pluto image from NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft. July 14th, 2015
Jean Shrimpton photographed by Bert Stern, Vogue January 1956
✍ sketch book
Julien Donkey-Boy, 1999, Dir. Harmony Korine
Solar energy that doesn’t block the view
A team of researchers at Michigan State University has developed a new type of solar concentrator that when placed over a window creates solar energy while allowing people to actually see through the window. It is called a transparent luminescent solar concentrator and can be used on buildings, cell phones and any other device that has a clear surface. And, according to Richard Lunt of MSU’s College of Engineering, the key word is “transparent.”
[read more at MSU] [paper] [picture credit: Yimu Zhao]
Vera Rubin, born 1928, was the first woman to be awarded the Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society since 1828.
Pictured here during her undergrad at Vassar College, she went on to get a PhD in astronomy at Georgetown, after being turned away from Princeton because she was a woman. In 1965, she became the first woman to be allowed access to the Palomar Observatory.
Rubin secured a position at the Carnegie Institution of Washington, where she continued her studies of the movement and rotations of galaxies and her observations are some of the strongest evidence we have for the existence of dark matter.
What a babe.