What happens when you rotate Copper Sulfate while it is on fire!
GUYS! how does this not have 10000 notes already?! Seriously! this is awesome…
(via cognition-and-dissonance)
24. ambulances. fire trucks. maps. the irreverent things in my head. I <3 food.
What happens when you rotate Copper Sulfate while it is on fire!
GUYS! how does this not have 10000 notes already?! Seriously! this is awesome…
(via cognition-and-dissonance)
Source: thatscienceguy
Source: drunkonstephen
Source: onlylolgifs
We can’t jump off bridges anymore because our iPhones will get ruined. We can’t take skinny dips in the ocean, because there’s no service on the beach and adventures aren’t real unless they’re on Instagram. Technology has doomed the spontaneity of adventure and we’re helping destroy it every time we Google, check-in, and hashtag.
— Jeremy Glass, We Can’t Get Lost Anymore (via cityyandcolour)
(via gabriel--archangel)
Source: her0inchic
(via heckyeahwhiteinktattoos)
Source: 60shortofmidnight
(via gypsyy-soul)
Source: niknak79
I AM MOVING TO ALASKA IN 2 WEEKS
I AM MOVING TO ALASKA IN 2 WEEKS
I AM MOVING TO ALASKA IN 2 WEEKS
Best. Phone call. Ever.
HOLY SHIT IS THIS EVEN MY LIFE
(via ashleytyler)
Source: suburbiaisinruins
The Mountains of Kong
A fictitious mountain range spreading over 1000 miles in West Africa.
Put on the map by James Rennell in 1798 they stayed on several maps for over a century until Louis-Gustave Binger found he could not find them where they were supposed to be according to Rennell.
CLASSIC GEOGRAPHY TROLLING.
LIKE A BOSS.
(via fuckyeahcartography)
Source: tripsthroughthepark
(via sunshineandpearls)
Source: mchades
Source: reddit.com
No sudden, sharp boundary marks the passage of day into night in this view of ocean and clouds over Earth. Instead, the shadow line or terminator is diffused and shows the gradual transition to darkness we experience as twilight. With the sun illuminating the scene from the right, the cloud tops reflect gently reddened sunlight filtered through the dusty troposphere, the lowest layer of the planet’s atmosphere. A clear high-altitude layer, visible along the day side’s upper edge, scatters blue sunlight and fades into the blackness of space. This picture actually is a single digital photograph taken in June of 2001 from the International Space Station orbiting at an altitude of 211 nautical miles.
Source: apod.nasa.gov
Source: cineraria
This is the best line in almost any TV series ever but you really only understand the enormity and profundity of it if you are familiar with the whole show’s mythology and it’s just so beautiful and I cried and I was in the bath.
(via bulbousalligators)
Source: neckerchiefs
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(via that-kid-erin)
Source: blogtard