Still and all, I bet they were confused as hell as to why these guys wanted to rub sticks in their mouths and collect their poop.
Still and all, I bet they were confused as hell as to why these guys wanted to rub sticks in their mouths and collect their poop.
The Yanomami villagers are a small collection of hunters and gatherers who are thought to have lived in total seclusion until they were contacted by a medical expedition in 2009.
seen a whirlpool in a pond spin itself out? ... that
Nothing lasts forever, not even black holes. According to Stephen Hawking, black holes will evaporate over vast…
Which is indeed scary, since she thought her chracter in Riddick was a well-written female character.
So basically there's a supervillain with a massive heat-generating death machine operating in the northern Pacific. Everybody panic!
Haha! That sounds sooo scary. I'm gonna stick with my house cats. Sometimes they try to kill me but so far they've been very bad at it.
I have a tiger rescue center nearby, and you can do a tour in the twilight during the summer months, and the tigers and other big cats are pretty active. Nothing quite gets the hairs on the back of your neck up like realizing that the tiger is watching you. And only you.
I'll take 'Last thing the White Witch saw for 1000 Alex"
Which lion face are you looking at?!
Disagree. Lion's face is full on "GTFO I KILL YOU NOW!" There is 0% "friendly" going on here.
Let me try this again, here are my fave soccer gifs:
For the (few) people that still talk shit about AoS and think it's "turrible", Agent May has a message for you:
Why are you surprised? It's gravitational lensing that causes the perceived invisibility of the wearer of the One Ring.
While supremely cool, is the article missing an image showing the detangled galaxy's original appearance without the lensing that it mentions? Or does said image not quite exist yet and they're creating it?
Albert,no offence to your memory but your ring looks like...OMG,you were Sauron all along!
I was warned about this fish in the Peruvian Amazon in 1987, well before the article mentioned here appeared. This article does not mention the temperature of the materials tested with the fish. Cold urine would not attract a candiru.
"scientists actually got a group of candiru in a tank" - Scientist: "Note, I am now standing in 1 .2 meters of water." "I am now dropping trou, approximately knee level." "I am proceeding to 'drain the lizard'. Observe the motion of the fish very closely, students."
Whew! What a relief! The last thing I need is piranhile dysfunction.