There was only one and now it's gone. One firepit to rule them all, now in the hands of some lucky etsy customer. I…
There was only one and now it's gone. One firepit to rule them all, now in the hands of some lucky etsy customer. I…
Today the prototype Orion spacecraft made its final move before heading to the launch pad for testing in December.…
Huge disks of dust and gas encircle many young stars. Some contain circular gaps — likely the result of forming…
They did a good job, with my daughter noticing he looked like Matt Smith faster than I could notice.
"The Caretaker" is my favorite episode of the Peter Capaldi era of Doctor Who thus far. And it's also probably going…
"Dinner is cooking"
In the latest installment of It's Okay to be Smart, Joe Hanson talks about the physics of fictional space battles.
Sooooo sorry that I watched this. I was never interested in Jackson's King Kong to begin with, but this is just primal horror to me and reminds me to NEVER GO OUTSIDE.
Seriously though.... Bread bowls are the best... Broccoli cheese soup in a bread bowl yeah so what once I'm done I have to nap the rest of the day it was delicious!!!
You're just angry he's not eating it out of a bread bowl.
We've seen the iconic opening credits of Game of Thrones remade countless times over the past several years, but…
Animals, who are now rocks! How could I resist?
I make mine the words of Gandalf the Grey: RUN YOU FOOLS!!!
http://wtfevolution.tumblr.com/
This comes to mind. Also, I believe a Cracked article once joked that there clearly is an intelligent creator, otherwise why would all the abominations be hidden under the sea or in Australia? Apparently Borneo is another Australia.
Once upon a time it was quite popular to depict the human body in terms of machinery. The idea was that all of the…
What really gets me is the rosy puddle of effluvia that dribbles out at the very end of the clip. ::Shudder::
For the first time, filmmakers in the forests of Borneo's Mount Kinabalu have documented the…
It really is incredible. I specialize in disasters, particularly catastrophic-scale landslides. Even within the context of someone who regularly investigates multi-million cubic meter behemoths with improbably long runout distances, lahars and pyroclastic flows scare me. They are just so big, so fast, and so mobile…
Breathing in near the eruption poses two hazards: