Bus to a field trip: light hearted yelling and fun dancing
Bus home: “Did you know I’m genuinely concerned I am unable to love?”
Bus to a field trip: light hearted yelling and fun dancing
Bus home: “Did you know I’m genuinely concerned I am unable to love?”
Breastplate from Augsburg, Germany, circa 1550.
from the Worchester Art Museum
1807 in the De Witt Wallace Museum, Colonial Williamsburg
how can I live with myself knowing I’ll never be 1% as cool, as stylin’, as RADICAL as this guy from 1807
this guy looks like he’s about to tell me it’s wednesday and then start wailing at the top of his lungs
“the CIA is releasing tens of thousands of files and videos from bin laden’s compound today, except his DVDs of ‘home on the range’ and ‘ice age: dawn of the dinosaurs’ and his copy of final fantasy vii, because those are copyrighted” is not a sentence i ever thought i would type, but 2017 continues to be full of surprises
On April 26, 1986, a power surge caused an explosion at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant near Pripyat, Ukraine. A large quantity of radioactive material was released.
On May 2, 1986, the Soviet government established a “Zone of Alienation” or “Exclusion Zone” around Chernobyl – a thousand square miles of “radioactive wasteland.” All humans were evacuated. The town of Pripyat was completely abandoned.
But the animals didn’t leave. And a new study, published this month in Current Biology, suggests they are doing fine. “None of our three hypotheses postulating radiation damage to large mammal populations at Chernobyl were supported by the empirical evidence,” says Jim Beasley, one of the researchers.
In fact, some of the populations have grown. These photos (mostly taken by Valeriy Yurko) come from the Belarusian side of the Exclusion Zone, and area called the Polessye State Radioecological Reserve. Kingfisher, elk, boar, baby spotted eagles, wild ponies, moose, rabbits, and wolves all make their home in the park. In some ways, human presence is worse for wildlife than a nuclear disaster.
Image credits:
- 1986 Chernobyl – ZUFAROV/AFP/Getty Images
- Wildlife photos – Valeriy Yurko/Polessye State Radioecological Reserve
- Ponies in winter – SERGEI SUPINSKY/AFP/Getty Images
“In some ways, human presence is worse for wildlife than a nuclear disaster”
indiegogo campaign to make a documentary about tumblr scams
I’d fund it
Wait
and so it begins …
A real, actual, I-am-not-fucking-lying-to-you-this-truly-happened moment from the Christmas special Rapsittie Street Kids: Believe in Santa
ricky: great-grandma, you always know just what to say!
ricky’s great-grandma: dohuhohohwhehelghuhohokesynohehCHRISTMAS huahhahohoho
I thought of this while i was driving today and almost drove into my mailbox
🙂 I go home in a month