Draw an iceberg and see how it will float > here
Earth’s Changing Ice : Meltwater lakes form on the surface of Greenland’s Petermann Glacier. (via NASA)
“The anthropologists got it wrong when they named our species Homo sapiens (‘wise man’). In any case it’s an arrogant and bigheaded thing to say, wisdom being one of our least evident features. In reality, we are Pan narrans, the storytelling chimpanzee.”
— Terry Pratchett (via hot-elf)
Nocturne in Black and Gold: The Falling Rocket, James Whistler
Saturday crafts. DIY Mir space station from Murzilka magazine (1988)
(If you actually do it, can you show me your result please? :D)
The largest dune gully here has had massive changes over the last six Mars years. Our goal is to obtain a fresh stereo pair and see if we can resolve the topographic changes. The crater was named after the town of Matara, Sri Lanka.
Enhanced color is less than 1 km; black and white is less than 5 km. ID: ESP_065934_1300 date: 20 August 2020 altitude: 249 km NASA/JPL/UArizona
“What were astronauts like when they first returned from outer space? Nurse Dee O'Hara: ‘They have something, a sort of wild look, I would say, as if they had fallen in love with a mystery up there, sort of as if they haven’t got their feet back on the ground, as if they regret having come back to us… a rage at having come back to earth. As if up there they’re not only freed from weight, from the force of gravity, but from desires, affections, passions, ambitions, from the body. Did you know that for months John [Glenn] and Wally [Schirra] and Scott [Carpenter] went around looking at the sky? You could speak to them and they didn’t answer, you could touch them on the shoulder and they didn’t notice; their only contact with the world was a dazed, absent, happy smile. They smiled at everything and everybody, and they were always tripping over things. They kept tripping over things because they never had their eyes on the ground.’”
— Craig Nelson, Rocket Men: The Epic Story of the First Men on the Moon (via m-l-rio)