Sinsation01

221 posts

Sinsation01

Sinsation01

@Synsation01

St. Louis, MO Katılım Şubat 2012
468 Takip Edilen50 Takipçiler
Sabitlenmiş Tweet
Sinsation01
Sinsation01@Synsation01·
@viralvideos @LeadingReport I heard that…. I want to be diplomatic in these times … Hoeever not I nor the majority of Americans do I believe ever thought any of these things would be occurring(immediate mass deportation; the end to the IRS etc). In these times, am I, a liberal wrong to feel patriotic?
English
0
0
2
179
Earth
Earth@earthcurated·
The Amazon river dolphin is known for developing a pink coloration, which is why it is often called the “pink river dolphin.” Its shade is thought to vary depending on factors such as water temperature, clarity, and geographic location. | photography by Michel Watson
Earth tweet media
English
69
87
719
47.2K
Sinsation01
Sinsation01@Synsation01·
@otokyo__ Here’s an oldie but goodie: The Posiden Adventure
GIF
English
0
0
0
2
Tokyo
Tokyo@otokyo__·
NAME one
Tokyo tweet media
English
15.1K
302
8.1K
2M
Daniel Titus (The Preacher)
Daniel Titus (The Preacher)@realdanieltitus·
Romans 14:11 “As surely as I live, says the Lord, every knee will bow before me; every tongue will confess to God.”
English
319
1.9K
22.4K
259.2K
Architecture Hub
Architecture Hub@archpng·
At the right moment, sunlight turns this fountain into what looks like flowing lava. This is the Fontana Luminosa in L’Aquila, Italy, created in 1934 by sculptor Nicola D’Antino. Its bronze figures hold an Abruzzo basin, with water cascading into the pools below — and when the sun hits the stream from the right angle, the fountain briefly glows like molten fire.
Architecture Hub tweet media
English
7
84
374
10.7K
John Moreno
John Moreno@JohnMoreno_33·
@InterestingSci1 A human remains with a note that says "Coming here was a really bad idea. Do not return to Earth, it's too late for you."
GIF
English
1
0
5
88
Sci_Explore
Sci_Explore@sci_explore1·
What would be the most terrifying discovery we could make on Mars?
Sci_Explore tweet media
English
85
22
138
7K
Sinsation01
Sinsation01@Synsation01·
@histories_arch The mounds are cemeteries with remains as shown. Similar to the mounds throughout the USA.
English
0
0
3
1K
ArchaeoHistories
ArchaeoHistories@histories_arch·
Beneath a quiet West Virginia mound, archaeologists found eleven people laid around one central burial, a pattern so deliberate it still unsettles the imagination. What makes Criel Mound linger in the mind is not simply its age, but the care buried inside it. Deep beneath the earth, eleven people were found together at the base, arranged around one central burial in a layout that looked intentional, ceremonial, and impossible to dismiss as random. That arrangement is the detail people remember, because it suggests a community making a statement in earth and ritual. Ten individuals surrounded the central figure, and the finds around that middle burial made excavators believe this person held unusual importance. Today the mound stands in South Charleston, but long before streets and businesses surrounded it, this was part of a much larger ceremonial landscape in the Kanawha Valley. The mound was once among extensive earthworks that stretched for miles on both sides of the river, evidence that this was not an isolated monument but part of a broader sacred geography. Archaeologists generally connect the mound to the Adena world, with the West Virginia Encyclopedia placing such builders in the Ohio and Kanawha drainages between roughly 1000 and 200 B.C. The commonly repeated estimate for Criel Mound itself is around 250 to 150 B.C., though some older nomination language also noted a mingling of Adena and Hopewell traits in the material recovered there. Even in altered form, the mound still conveys scale. Sources describe it as about 33 feet high after historic damage, making it one of the largest surviving burial mounds in West Virginia and second only to Grave Creek Mound in the state. But Criel Mound was not left untouched by the modern world. Before the Smithsonian excavations, its summit had already been leveled for a bandstand or judges’ stand, tied to a racetrack that once circled the mound, so by the time investigators arrived part of the original form had already been lost. That loss matters, because every change to a mound like this erases context that can never be fully restored. What survives is precious not because it is complete, but because it endured despite being treated for years as scenery, usable land, and public space rather than as an irreplaceable archive of Native history. In late 1883, Smithsonian investigators began cutting a shaft from the top down toward the original ground surface. Near the upper levels they found burials at shallow depths, and the associated artifacts led later interpreters to believe those upper interments were intrusive and from a later period rather than part of the mound’s first use. Then came a long stretch of earth with no major discovery. Only when excavators neared the base, roughly 31 feet down, did the original burial deposit appear and reveal the moment for which the mound had first been raised. The dead at the bottom were found on a prepared setting of bark and ash, then covered with another layer of bark. Postmolds and structural traces suggested some form of tomb or vault, which helps explain why this was understood as a formal, deliberate burial event rather than a casual accumulation of graves. The central burial drew the most attention, and not only because of position. Copper near the head, shell beads, and weapon points were associated with that individual, while some of the surrounding burials had fewer or no objects, creating a pattern of difference that likely reflected status, role, or ceremony. Older retellings often fixate on the size of the person in the center. Some sources and later retellings describe a skeleton around 6 feet or even 6 feet 8 3/4 inches long, but the West Virginia Encyclopedia stresses that Norris reported the individuals as adults of medium size, and the National Register form itself warns that the extreme height may have been exaggerated by pressure from the earth. #archaeohistories
ArchaeoHistories tweet media
English
39
86
547
58.7K
Sinsation01
Sinsation01@Synsation01·
@histories_arch Genius. We still use incubators to this very day. The circus show is sketchy sounding tho. He would need a much more humane setting for the real props to be given… My true fact.
English
9
0
9
6K
ArchaeoHistories
ArchaeoHistories@histories_arch·
In early 1900s, many physicians believed premature babies were weak and not worth saving. But a sideshow entertainer named Martin Couney thought otherwise. Using incubators that he called child hatcheries, Couney displayed premature babies at his Cone. At a time when many hospitals lacked both the equipment and the will to treat premature babies, Couney operated “infant incubator exhibits” at venues like Coney Island and the 1939 New York World’s Fair. Visitors paid admission, and the proceeds funded round-the-clock medical care, trained nurses, sterilized equipment, and temperature-controlled incubators based on European designs. Medical consensus in the early 20th century often viewed premature infants as unlikely to survive. Couney challenged that assumption. Over several decades, his exhibits reportedly cared for thousands of infants, with survival rates far exceeding typical hospital outcomes of the era. His work, while unconventional, helped normalize neonatal care and demonstrated the effectiveness of incubators long before hospitals widely adopted them. By 1940s, advances in neonatal medicine, many validated by outcomes from Couney’s programs, led hospitals to establish dedicated premature infant units, effectively ending the need for public incubator exhibits. © Reddit #archaeohistories
ArchaeoHistories tweet media
English
49
73
486
32.1K
Eric Matheny 🎙️
Eric Matheny 🎙️@ericmmatheny·
Under Florida Statute 776.013, you may legally use deadly force against someone attempting to unlawfully and forcefully enter your home or occupied vehicle. The minute he kicks the door, it goes from trespass to attempted burglary.
English
664
589
11.6K
644.7K
St. Louis Blues
St. Louis Blues@StLouisBlues·
Thanks for everything, Captain.
St. Louis Blues tweet media
English
57
423
4.2K
102.6K
Native American Chief
Native American Chief@_native_america·
My new little Cherokee grandson born 2 weeks ago. NATIVE AMERICAN FUTURE. ❤️❤️
Native American Chief tweet media
English
3
2
19
175
Sarah ❤️
Sarah ❤️@anabia1278·
Please don’t scroll past without showing him some love 🥺💙
Sarah ❤️ tweet media
English
355
435
8.5K
87.6K
Native American History
Native American History@alaska_godosiyo·
I Have turned 116 today , Nobody wish me 🥹🥹 Happy Birthday
Native American History tweet media
English
635
157
2K
23.7K
Native American Tribes
Native American Tribes@americannative_·
If you support Native American people's, history & culture 🥰Say.. "Yes
Native American Tribes tweet media
English
198
41
420
5.2K
Sinsation01
Sinsation01@Synsation01·
On CNN they are reporting the WAPO urging the President to declare an emergency to seize election powers. I am stating this to totally disagree with those going against our protection of the US Constitution. Like or dislike the American history has proven that more than 2 terms for the President seat is too much… If you are enjoying the ride - bu all means encourage a continuation thru the Vice President and try your hand…. Let’s Go
English
0
0
0
69