Simon Sparks
4.1K posts


@AYOKA1996 I started getting that when I hung my keys off the belt loop of my jeans 🗝️🔑👖
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@Col45398669 Designed to self clean with the rain and wind, the grooves form a wind vortex so it cleans the whole light rather then just the sides as the water is sucked around
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@ShadowBriefing_ Trump's a pedofile and he's still walking free.. So nothing is worse than that
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40 million-year-old prehistoric whale fossil discovered in Egypt
The fossil belongs to the Basilosaurus, an ancient whale that lived around 40 million years ago.
Discovered at Wadi Al-Hitan, the massive creature could grow up to 60 feet long and is considered one of the earliest giant whales ever discovered.


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@ScienceFocusonX Inventors have been around for years designing car that runs on water, but each time they disappeared and killed off buy the petroleum companies
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Japan just turned thin air into fuel.
No oil rigs. No drilling. No pipelines stretching across oceans.
Just water, CO₂, and a process that flips combustion on its head.
ENEOS Corporation, Japan's biggest oil refiner, pulled it off at their Yokohama lab.
They built a demo plant that sucks carbon dioxide straight from the atmosphere, splits hydrogen out of water using renewable energy, then fuses them through Fischer-Tropsch synthesis into liquid hydrocarbons.
The result? Real, usable synthetic petroleum.
The kicker: this fuel is "drop-in ready." That means it works in the cars you already drive, the planes already in the sky, the pipelines already in the ground. Zero modifications.
They didn't just brew it in a beaker either. They ran actual vehicles on it. It works.
Think about what that unlocks. Countries with no oil reserves could manufacture their own fuel using nothing but sunlight, wind, and the air around them.
The geopolitical chessboard would flip overnight.
Sectors that electrification can't easily touch, like aviation and heavy shipping, suddenly have a clean fuel path.
There's a catch, though. The process is hungry. The same electricity it takes to brew one liter of synthetic fuel could push an EV about 200 km down the road. ENEOS quietly shelved the project in 2025 because the economics didn't math out yet.
But the science? Proven. The blueprint exists. Someone, somewhere, will crack the cost problem.
And the day they do, the oil map of the planet gets redrawn.
Source: ENEOS Corporation / TheTownHall(.)News

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@albino_girlss @Naomi_Shadoww Twice the fun or twice the trouble 😜
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