mostlythemarsh:

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The Show

70sscifiart:

A 1977 Honeywell ad featuring a businessman recoiling in horror at the sight of an envelope zipping around his office in a shower of electric sparks to land on his desk. The text below this image simply reads: "What the heck is Electronic Mail?"ALT

Me, on monday

(via incurablyromanticsblog)

matrose:

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just had the most beautiful night of my life

friendswithclay:

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Interpretations Of The Virgins Of Pachacamac Lima, Peru c.1950

(via notwiselybuttoowell)

songs-of-the-east:

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Linocut prints by Ukrainian folk painter Oleksandr Ivakhnenko from a book featuring the poem: “A Cherry Orchard by the House” written by famous Ukrainian poet Taras Shevchenko

(Source: uartlib.org)

omtai:

love downloading a pdf to never read. just in case. like lol. you’re coming home with me

(via the-busy-ghost)

zurin:

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real shit

(via elbiotipo)

byjove:

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damn. he had to walk home naked.

(via lladyburd)

bunmellos:

i need everyone to see the cat i met today

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his name is hercule purrot

(via eastern-bloc-party)

beardedmrbean:

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I love the midwest so much

(via whatmarvellousthings)

flyingbooks42 asked:

Approximately how many frogs are there on Earth? A few years ago my friends and I were trying to figure out the answer for fun but we couldn't find even a high-margin-of-error estimate anywhere.

markscherz:

If you mean how many species of frog there are, you can always find the current tally of scientifically recognised names here. As of today, there are 7929 recognised species. However, that is a long way from the total number of actual species on earth today. To get at that number, we have to know what the Linnean Shortfall is (i.e., the number of undescribed species still awaiting description). We only have estimates of this value for a few of the hyper-diverse areas of the world, of which I can just give a couple illustrative examples: In Madagascar, we have maybe half of the total diversity described so far (437 species as of today, but a total of >700 estimated based on already collected but still undescribed lineages, which fails to take into account the new species that we discover every time we undertake fieldwork). In New Guinea, the total number is undoubtedly higher, maybe even as high as 1200 species, and the taxonomic inventory still further from completion (just 560 species described to date).

If this pattern holds in the case in the rest of the hyper-diverse areas of the world, but not the temperate regions (an assumption with good empirical foundation, based on combined low diversity and low species description rate), I would conservatively estimate that the total number of frog species on earth is somewhere around 14,000—not quite double the current tally. So there remains a lot of taxonomic and exploratory work to do!

But if your question refers to the total number of individuals, that number is impossible to quantify, or even really estimate, because there are too many variables. Do you count tadpoles? What about eggs? For some species, there are millions of adults, and in some parts of the year probably billions of tadpoles, because each female can lay multiple clutches of thousands (>20,000 in some toads) of eggs in a single season. For other species, there are tiny populations, and clutches are small; even as low as two or three froglets (most of these are direct developers). Averaged out, I think you might still come to tens of billions of frogs alive on Earth at any one time… and most of those would be toads, because bufonids pretty much always have the largest clutches. Most will not make it through metamorphosis, and only a tiny fraction make it to adulthood. But there are a lot—and I mean a lot—of frogs in the world. And if that’s not good news, I don’t know what is.

bebs-art-gallery:

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The Knight of the Flowers (1894)

— by Georges Rochegrosse

(via byrons)

thesilicontribesman:

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Black Loch Recreated Iron Age Roundhouse, Whithorn Trust Museum, Whithorn, Wigtownshire, Scotland

met-european-sculpture:
“Vase (one of a pair) by Ignaz Preissler, European Sculpture and Decorative Arts
Gift of R. Thornton Wilson, in memory of Florence Ellsworth Wilson, 1954 Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY
Medium: Hard-paste porcelain...

met-european-sculpture:

Vase (one of a pair) by Ignaz Preissler, European Sculpture and Decorative Arts


Gift of R. Thornton Wilson, in memory of Florence Ellsworth Wilson, 1954 Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY
Medium: Hard-paste porcelain (Jingdezhen ware)

(via oldtimejapan)

shutyourmoustache:

(via whatmarvellousthings)