otter tongue appreciation post

otter tongue appreciation post

(Source: prochoiceinpink)
YES HELLO
YES I WOULD LIKE TO ORDER ALL THE CARROTS
THANK YOU
(Source: coconotchanel)
If Earth Had Rings
First off, they would be really pretty to look at. They would also dominate the sky in both night and day at exactly the same place as they would never rise nor set. And at night you would see the Earth’s shadow swing across the rings, like in the 4th photo here.
However, life would be very different on Earth if this were the case. Nocturnal animals would have a hard time being nocturnal, as the light reflecting from the rings would illuminate the night.
Because we are closer to the Sun than Saturn is, the rings would be more rocky than ice, making them less bright but still pretty bright. In fact, you would see far less stars at night (living anywhere other than the equator or the arctic circle) because of the light pollution and not to mention ruin most meteor showers because of that.
During the day the rings would block sunlight in certain regions of the planet creating wild weather cycles and effecting plant life as well. So basically, they would be definitely pretty to look at but they would also make a whole lot of things screwy.
Illustrations by Ron Miller // io9
— Click the photos for captions
“How will your tattoos look when you’re old?!”
Pretty fucking bad ass apparently.Hell to the yes
I like the one lady with the small tat on her arm.
(Source: thievinggenius)
THIS IS SO FUCKING HUGE YOU GUYS! PLEASE BOOST! Insurance coverage for SRS, hormone therapy, etc. is now MANDATORY. The law doesn’t cover everything, such as electrolysis, because it’s officially worded something like “insurance providers must cover any gender-related treatments that would normally be covered for non-trans patients,” but all the same this is HUGE
How long would you survive a bunny apocalypse?
“The Flawed Concept of Good Versus Evil: The Philosophy of Hayao Miyazaki”
Art by Ashley Allis

Scientist Rosalind Franklin made the first clear X-ray images of DNA’s structure. Her work was described as the most beautiful X-ray photographs ever taken. Franklin’s ‘Photo 51’ informed Crick and Watson of DNA’s double helix structure for which they were awarded a Nobel Prize. Franklin died of ovarian cancer in 1958, aged 37, her contribution to DNA’s discovery story unacknowledged.