
Musambo
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Musambo
@MusambotheMuse
Adventure, Crazy Football follower... Book fanatic, A Goonerholic, Tennis lover, Pop, Rock and Roll. I Pop Punk not Pills... RTs do not mean endorsement.
Katılım Mart 2013
1.7K Takip Edilen909 Takipçiler
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Once you hear the whispers from the grave, you better run or you will be caught.
MMP
#ChroniclesOfTheLostSouls
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Medvedev and Clay, it's a love story that keeps giving.
BBC Sport@BBCSport
Daniil Medvedev loses his cool 😬 The Russian suffered the first 6-0 6-0 loss of his career against Matteo Berrettini in Monte Carlo.
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Your eyes can only see the moon in gray. It's actually covered in color, blues and oranges and pinks, all from different metals sitting in the rock. You just need a camera and some patience to pull them out.
These photos are called "mineral moons." A photographer points a telescope at the moon, takes hundreds or thousands of pictures, stacks them on top of each other to clean up the image, then slowly turns up the color intensity in editing software. The colors that show up were always there. Too faint for your eyes to catch on their own.
Each color is a different metal. The blue areas have a lot of titanium in them. The orange and brown zones have more iron. The pinkish-red patches around the edges are the oldest parts of the moon's crust, full of aluminum and calcium.
That deep blue region on the left side is called the Sea of Tranquility. Apollo 11 landed right there in July 1969. When Armstrong and Aldrin brought back 47 pounds of rock from that blue titanium zone, scientists cracked the samples open and found three minerals that had never been seen on Earth before. They named one "armalcolite" after the three astronauts (Arm-Al-Col: Armstrong, Aldrin, Collins). They named another "tranquillityite" after the landing site itself. For 40 years, tranquillityite was known as "the moon's own mineral" because nobody could find it here. Then in 2011, a geologist in Western Australia spotted a speck of it inside a billion-year-old rock.
Andrew McCarthy, a photographer in Sacramento, once stacked 150,000 separate pictures of the moon to build one color map. Each splash of blue or orange in these images is a real metal deposit on a surface that's been getting hit by space rocks for 3.5 billion years. The moon was never gray. We just couldn't see it.
˗ˏˋ freckxi ˎˊ˗@freckxi
i’m sick she is so beautiful
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Hello, Moon. It’s great to be back.
Here’s a taste of what the Artemis II astronauts photographed during their flight around the Moon. Check out more photos from the mission: nasa.gov/artemis-ii-mul…




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Billionaires don’t have bank accounts like you and me. They have art collections,Yachts,Mansions,Stocks. None of it gets taxed until they sell it. So they just never sell it. They borrow against it instead. Live off the loans. Pay almost nothing. Then when they die, their kids inherit it all tax-free. The wealth never gets taxed, It just gets passed down.
And we wonder why the gap keeps getting wider.
໊smolaraa@kesikesiluv
Hit me with the harshest reality truth.
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🚨holy shit.. the CIA just used a tool called "Ghost Murmur" to find an American pilot hiding in a mountain crevice in Iran.. by detecting his heartbeat..
not his phone.. not a tracker.. not a radio signal.. his heartbeat..
Lockheed Martin's Skunk Works built it.. the same classified division that built the SR-71 Blackbird.. the stealth bomber.. the U-2 spy plane.. every secret aircraft America has ever denied existed until they didn't..
it uses quantum magnetometry to pick up the electromagnetic pulse your heart makes every time it beats.. then AI filters out everything else..
the pilot.. callsign "Dude 44 Bravo" was wounded.. alone for two days.. hiding in a crack in a mountain.. while Iranian forces searched for him on foot..
and America found him from the sky.. by listening to his chest..
here's the part that should rewrite everything you think about privacy and power.. this was Ghost Murmur's FIRST operational use.. meaning it's been sitting in a vault.. tested.. ready.. waiting for a moment important enough to reveal it..
they didn't show you this to impress you.. they showed you this because the next person they use it on won't be a rescue
Polymarket@Polymarket
JUST IN: CIA reportedly used secret new tool “Ghost Murmur” to locate the downed U.S. airman in Iran, capable of detecting a human heartbeat from long range.
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Leading @Arsenal to go nine points clear at the top of the Premier League table 🔝
A flawless March for Mikel Arteta sees him crowned @BarclaysFooty Manager of the Month ❤️

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Harvard historian Michael McCormick has a candidate for the worst year to be alive: 536 AD. A volcano blocked the sun for 18 months. Snow fell in China in August. Crops failed across three continents. We know exactly when it happened because trees recorded it in their rings.
Each ring is one year of weather. Wide ring, plenty of rain. Narrow ring, drought. A charred, warped ring (scientists call it a “frost ring”) means the climate took a hit, usually from a volcano dumping ash into the upper atmosphere. A tree-ring scientist named Mike Baillie at Queen’s University Belfast found the 536 signal in Irish oak during the 1990s. The rings from that year are paper thin. Almost nothing grew. Trees on three different continents showed the same scar.
The oldest living tree is a bristlecone pine in California called Methuselah. Nearly 5,000 years old. It was a sapling when the Egyptian pyramids were going up. The Forest Service won’t say where it is because they’re afraid tourists will love it to death.
Researchers used over 1,400 sets of tree ring records from across North America to map droughts going back to 800 AD. Their map nailed the Dust Bowl of the 1930s. But it also found the Great Pueblo Drought, 1276 to 1297. Twenty-one straight years of dry. That drought likely forced the ancestral Pueblo people to pack up and leave the entire Colorado Plateau. An entire civilization walked away from their homes, and the trees kept the receipt.
A 2015 Yale study in Nature counted about 3 trillion trees on Earth. Sounds like a lot until you hear the rest: that’s 46% fewer than when human civilization started. We cut down about 15 billion a year. We plant back maybe 5 billion. Every one of those trees was quietly keeping a climate record, year by year. When one comes down, that record is gone.
Curiosity@CuriosityonX
Tree rings reveal how short a human life Is compared to nature’s endless timeline ⏳🌴
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