Pablo Fierro

3.1K posts

Pablo Fierro banner
Pablo Fierro

Pablo Fierro

@Pablo_Fierro_92

Physics PhD student

Katılım Eylül 2017
422 Takip Edilen15 Takipçiler
Pablo Fierro
Pablo Fierro@Pablo_Fierro_92·
@iRoyJones502 I thought the authors of the Halo lore were Joe Staten and Jason Jhones (I still love Marcus R. Leto, the father of the Master Chief)
English
1
0
6
1.1K
Pablo Fierro retweetledi
Nostos
Nostos@NostosLit·
- Franz Kafka, The Diaries of Franz Kafka
Nostos tweet media
Deutsch
12
2.4K
10.5K
354.9K
Pablo Fierro retweetledi
rob
rob@conoloracigarro·
rob tweet media
ZXX
42
9.1K
39.1K
440.6K
GoldAthena 💜
GoldAthena 💜@gold_athena_·
[MOD RELEASE] Halo: CE - Female Master Chief Available NOW on the Steam Workshop Happy Pride, everyone!!
English
295
957
9.2K
517.5K
Teh Spearhead
Teh Spearhead@TehSpearhead·
Then why in this Jackfrags video does the horrible blur disappear when he disables motion blur that is specifically called motion blur in the settings of the game.
Teh Spearhead tweet media
Sill@silderfoe

@TehSpearhead You don't know what motion blur is, stop embarrassing yourself

English
13
12
348
10.7K
Pablo Fierro retweetledi
Halo
Halo@Halo·
A mysterious ring. A lone Spartan. This is Halo completely rebuilt. This is Halo: Campaign Evolved. #HaloCE
English
555
2.5K
15.4K
1.7M
Pablo Fierro retweetledi
Math Files
Math Files@Math_files·
Math Files tweet media
ZXX
66
563
4.2K
201.1K
Ivan Vargas
Ivan Vargas@Vargas11Ivan·
@porktendencia Mmm literal solo posteo una foto de un hombre, no puso ninguna palabra ni expresó alguna idea, yo creo que USTEDES están entendiendo o moldeando algo a su antojo no? Ustedes están “completando” el chiste ofensivo que creyeron que hizo el, eso me parece bastante contradictorio.
Español
7
0
22
4.9K
¿Por qué es Tendencia?
¿Por qué es Tendencia?@porktendencia·
"Chumel": Por esta imagen que publicó y posteriormente borró
¿Por qué es Tendencia? tweet media
Español
82
92
2.4K
136.6K
Pablo Fierro retweetledi
Nasty Poet
Nasty Poet@nxstypxet·
Nasty Poet tweet media
ZXX
21
14.1K
65.4K
510K
Pablo Fierro retweetledi
CRCpaleos
CRCpaleos@CRCpaleos·
PALEOARTE Butterfly Effect (Emma LeRae)
CRCpaleos tweet media
Italiano
7
1.3K
9.1K
64.9K
Monsu
Monsu@Monsuta_Akiba·
me da gusto ver extranjeros comer tacos REALES y no esas malas imitaciones que los estadounidenses quieren hacer pasar por tacos, la tortilla debe ser BLANDA y no dura
おちゃ@ocha_matecha

タコスは愛だから

Español
43
211
3.2K
43.9K
Pablo Fierro retweetledi
Men's Humor
Men's Humor@MensHumor·
Dude got bodied by a body of water
Men's Humor tweet media
English
112
2K
25.6K
282.3K
Pablo Fierro retweetledi
Corazon Mexica
Corazon Mexica@MiCorazonMexica·
The concept of the nahual in Mesoamerica is an ancient tradition stretching back thousands of years. A tonal or “spirit animal” is not a separate creature to which a person is merely connected, but another manifestation of the self. During dreams, it journeys through the worlds of the ancestors and the Teteo, moving beyond the limits of ordinary human life. A nahual is a person capable of consciously transforming into this spiritual form. In this painting, a nahual flies above prehispanic Mexico transforming into an eagle, a being associated with the Sun, warfare, vision, and divine force moving across the heavens. The eagle and the human wear each other’s masks because they are revealed to be one single being: human and animal, earthly and divine, joined together. The figure’s body is painted yellow, a color associated with beauty in prehispanic Nahua culture. They are shown as Xochihua, a third gender believed to contain within themselves both masculine and feminine sacred force, and thus to stand closer to divine sources of power and wisdom. Their body is covered in Olmec glyphs invoking the powers of the four directions, the trees which uphold the heavens, and the hands through which sacred acts and transformations are woven. This painting is available as a print in my shop, alongside books, calendars, paintings, and oracle works inspired by the traditions and sacred imagery of Mesoamerica etsy.com/shop/MiCorazon…
Corazon Mexica tweet media
English
1
15
104
1.4K
CRCpaleos
CRCpaleos@CRCpaleos·
PALEOARTE Iguanodon (Mossa Cannibalis)
CRCpaleos tweet media
Italiano
29
768
6.8K
179.9K
Pablo Fierro retweetledi
Promakos
Promakos@PROMAKOS_·
No, el pozole no se hacía con carne humana. Lo que Sahagún describe en el Códice Florentino es el tlacatlaolli, un guiso ceremonial de maíz nixtamalizado con carne de cautivo sacrificado en la fiesta de Xipe Tótec, reservado a la elite mexica con fines religiosos. No usa la palabra pozolli ni una sola vez y la identificación de que el pozole es igual al tlacatlaolli es una conjetura moderna de la divulgación gastronómica, no de los cronistas. Y lo de que los frailes sustituyeron la carne humana por cerdo por similitud de textura no aparece en ninguna fuente colonial, es un invento de blogs anglosajones que saltó a TikTok hacia 2018 y se hizo viral. El maíz nixtamalizado siguió comiéndose porque era la base alimenticia y el cerdo entró por barato y disponible y por ser básico en la cocina española. El tlacatlaolli existió, pero el pozole es otra cosa.
ArchaeoHistories@histories_arch

One of Mexico's most beloved comfort foods began as a sacred Aztec ritual dish.... The earliest written references to pozole appear in the Florentine Codex, the 16th Century CE, ethnographic record compiled by Franciscan friar Bernardino de Sahagún from the testimony of Indigenous Nahua elders. The dish was made from nixtamalized maize, the hominy that still defines it today, and was prepared for specific religious ceremonies tied to the Aztec worldview of reciprocity between gods and humans. According to Aztec creation mythology, humans were formed from maize dough, making corn both literal and symbolic life. The word pozole itself likely derives from the Nahuatl pozolli, meaning foamy, a reference to the way hominy blooms and opens as it cooks. When the Spanish arrived in the early 16th Century and suppressed Indigenous ritual practices, the ceremonial version could no longer exist in its original form (which sometimes used meat from human sacrifices). Pork became the replacement protein, Spanish chronicles noting its textural similarity as justification. Onions, garlic, bay leaves, and Old World herbs arrived alongside it. What emerged from that collision of two culinary worlds is one of the earliest and most successful examples of mestizo cuisine in history. Today, pozole is inseparable from Mexican celebrations, particularly Christmas and New Year's, when families simmer enormous pots of it for hours, the broth deepening in flavour as the guajillo and ancho chiles, corn, and slow-cooked pork become one unified thing. © Eats History #archaeohistories

Español
48
670
4.5K
113.3K