4gifs:
“Little old lady shows dancing street performer how it’s done. [video]
”
Yeah!

4gifs:

Little old lady shows dancing street performer how it’s done. [video]

Yeah!

ayustar:
“ Gastrotheca cornuta, Horned Marsupial Frog, IUCN Redlist: Endangered ”
ultrafacts:
“ More facts HERE
”
did-you-kno:
“ Source
”

silvergoldrobotz:

rohanslady:

lotr cast commentary

hes danish

hes just letting his inner viking out

bra jobba viggo <3

amoying:

when you need to ask an important question but don’t know how to bring it up

image

rosievandoll:
“ Selk´nam People, Tierra del Fuego, Martín Gusinde.
”

rosievandoll:

Selk´nam People, Tierra del Fuego, Martín Gusinde.

the-absolute-funniest-posts:

brianashanee:

Everything we were taught about aging is all in our minds. Eternal youth.

 

animals-plus-nature:
“Coyote and Pup by Doug Dance Nature Photography on Flickr.
”
did-you-kno:
“ Source
”
terra-mater:
“ Antarctic sea ice takes over more of the ocean than ever before
“ Antarctica’s sea ice is creeping further out in the ocean! New data from a Japanese satellite shows that sea ice surrounding the southern continent in late September...

terra-mater:

Antarctic sea ice takes over more of the ocean than ever before

Antarctica’s sea ice is creeping further out in the ocean! New data from a Japanese satellite shows that sea ice surrounding the southern continent in late September reached out over 7.51 million square miles (19.47 million square kilometers).

The extent — a slight increase over 2012′s record of 7.50 million square miles (19.44 million square km) — is the largest recorded instance of Antarctica sea ice since satellite records began, NASA said. Data was recorded using the Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer 2 (AMSR2) sensor on the Global Change Observation Mission 1st-Water (GCOM-W1) satellite.

“While researchers continue to study the forces driving the growth in sea ice extent, it is well understood that multiple factors—including the geography of Antarctica, the region’s winds, as well as air and ocean temperatures—all affect the ice,” NASA stated.

“Geography and winds are thought to be especially important. Unlike the Arctic, where sea ice is confined in a basin, Antarctica is a continent surrounded by open ocean. Since its sea ice is unconfined, it is particularly sensitive to changes in the winds. As noted by the National Snow and Ice Data Center, some research has suggested that changes in Antarctic sea ice are caused in part by a strengthening of the westerly winds that flow unhindered in a circle above the Southern Ocean.”

Image credit: NASA/Jesse Allen, using data from the Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer 2 (AMSR2) sensor on the Global Change Observation Mission 1st-Water (GCOM-W1) satellite.

foodchewer:

I love nature