Alice in Tumbleland

I usually follow back

(via rastaand)

midnight-gallery:

Partial Cross-Section of Adult Skull.
A Practical Treatise on the Diseases of the Ear Including a Sketch of Aural Anatomy and Physiology. D. B. St. John Roosa, 1884.


god damn this is cool

midnight-gallery:

Partial Cross-Section of Adult Skull.

A Practical Treatise on the Diseases of the Ear Including a Sketch of Aural Anatomy and Physiology. D. B. St. John Roosa, 1884.

god damn this is cool

(via scientificillustration)

(Source: packad, via dottiejillian)

(via ckings)

yum

yum

(Source: thepursuitaesthetic)

(Source: emptiedski3s, via rastaand)

Sometimes i just want to scream

Sometimes i just want to scream

(Source: andrewbreitel, via rastaand)

(Source: haygirlhey, via jerryspringr)

ikenbot:

NASA to Reveal Hubble Discovery of Milky Way’s Violent Fate
Figure: Galactic Cannibalism of two galaxies that wandered too close to each other’s orbit.
NASA will reveal new discoveries about the violent fate of our Milky Way galaxy on Thursday (May 31), the space agency has announced.
NASA will hold a press conference at 1 p.m. EDT (1700 GMT) Thursday at the agency’s headquarters in Washington, D.C. Scientists will discuss new Hubble Space Telescope findings about the inevitable crash of the Milky Way and Andromeda galaxies, which will occur billions of years from now.
“Because of uncertainties in Andromeda’s motion, it has not been possible to determine whether the Milky Way will have a head-on collision or glancing blow with the neighboring galaxy billions of years in the future,” NASA officials said in a media alert Friday (May 25). “Hubble’s precise observations will settle this question.”

ikenbot:

NASA to Reveal Hubble Discovery of Milky Way’s Violent Fate

Figure: Galactic Cannibalism of two galaxies that wandered too close to each other’s orbit.

NASA will reveal new discoveries about the violent fate of our Milky Way galaxy on Thursday (May 31), the space agency has announced.

NASA will hold a press conference at 1 p.m. EDT (1700 GMT) Thursday at the agency’s headquarters in Washington, D.C. Scientists will discuss new Hubble Space Telescope findings about the inevitable crash of the Milky Way and Andromeda galaxies, which will occur billions of years from now.

“Because of uncertainties in Andromeda’s motion, it has not been possible to determine whether the Milky Way will have a head-on collision or glancing blow with the neighboring galaxy billions of years in the future,” NASA officials said in a media alert Friday (May 25). “Hubble’s precise observations will settle this question.”

(via scinerds)

My sister…

See’s the first tear,

Catches the second

and

Stops the third

showslow:

Fumi Mini Nakamura is illustrator based in the San Francisco Bay Area, Northern California USA. Born in Shimizu, Shizuoka, Japan in the winter of 1984 where she spent the first twelve years of her life. Her illustration often stays within the realm of the human figure, very frequently disfigured in some subtle way, and often engulfed within seas of nature or wildlife.

showslow:

‘The Day The World Went Away’ is an editorial/film photographed and directed by Pierre Debusschere.

This is his Tumblr.

showslow:

Noches, Illustrations by Melóm.