Selina S 🇦🇺

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Selina S 🇦🇺

Selina S 🇦🇺

@SStamoran

Proud Aussie wife and mum to pup Theo 🐕 Right leaning and Christian. Love President Trump. Coal & nuclear energy the way to go!

Sydney, New South Wales Katılım Kasım 2019
5.1K Takip Edilen2.4K Takipçiler
R3tards Down Under
R3tards Down Under@r3tarddownunder·
White liberal woman and Indians dancing together obnoxiously in Melbourne. Deport them all.
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Old Soldier
Old Soldier@OMGTheMess·
$68.5 million for HIV treatment for immigrants? Why are we allowing that immigrant?
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Selina S 🇦🇺
Selina S 🇦🇺@SStamoran·
Dug out an ancient yoga DVD as can't afford 2x $40 classes per week anymore (thanks friggin @AlboMP) Our pup enjoyed jumping around to get in on the action.
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MyFairLady
MyFairLady@MyFairLady4U·
Timeline cleanse. I will ALWAYS support the true Royals. Prince and Princess of Wales 🇬🇧
MyFairLady tweet media
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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
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.
freckxi ⋆˚࿔@freckxi

i’m sick she is so beautiful

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Ted Bullpitt 🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺
One must wonder if the @AusFedPolice hadn't spent the last 10 years going after BRS they might have not let Sajid and Naveed Akram, the Bondi terrorists, slip through the cracks and 15 Australians might still be alive Krissy Barrett you must resign now
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Mike Bales 🫡🇺🇸
Mike Bales 🫡🇺🇸@MikeBales·
If you always tell your dog “I’ll be right back” before leaving the house, I want to be your friend.
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