free-parking:

Vintage National Geographic images, via

  1. Female beluga whale in Cunningham Inlet, Canada, 1994
  2. Prekestolen over Lyse Fjord in Norway, 1957
  3. Macaws in the Peruvian rain forest, 1994
  4. Castelo de Pena near Sintra, Portugal, 1965
  5. Solar eclipse, 1970
  6. The Royal Danish Ballet, 1974

atavus:

Richard Serra - Transparencies, 2012


Even modest improvements in the social, economic, and political problems that our global civilization now faces could release enormous resources, both material and human, for other goals. There’s plenty of housework to be done here on Earth, and our commitment to it must be steadfast. But we’re the kind of species that needs a frontier - for fundamental biological reasons. Every time humanity stretches itself and turns a new corner, it receives a jolt of productive vitality that can carry it for centuries. There’s a new world next door. And we know how to get there.

thatscienceguy:

Picture from Hubbles Deep Field Project

The hubble space telescope glared at 1 spot in the sky continously for 50 days to produce this Amazing, and detailed, Picture!


Dylan doldrums

Dylan doldrums

(via lickmyripple)


You give me goose bumps when you touch me butterflies when I see you, he gives me fever…


I came to a point where I needed solitude and just stop the machine of ‘thinking’ and ‘enjoying’ what they call ‘living’, I just wanted to lie in the grass and look at the clouds.
Jack Kerouac  (via theonlyc)

(via theonlyc)