I Want To Believe.

I want to believe.

Dana Scully - Our Lady Of Skepticism By Heymonster

Dana Scully - Our Lady of Skepticism by Heymonster

More Posts from Fionaahutton and Others

8 years ago

Smelled nice. ⚘ Yes. ❤

fionaahutton - Just me
2 years ago
Parga & Kreta (Crete) Greece By Lars Didricksson Via Flickr: Sunbathing And Swimming In Greece Is Super
Parga & Kreta (Crete) Greece By Lars Didricksson Via Flickr: Sunbathing And Swimming In Greece Is Super
Parga & Kreta (Crete) Greece By Lars Didricksson Via Flickr: Sunbathing And Swimming In Greece Is Super
Parga & Kreta (Crete) Greece By Lars Didricksson Via Flickr: Sunbathing And Swimming In Greece Is Super
Parga & Kreta (Crete) Greece By Lars Didricksson Via Flickr: Sunbathing And Swimming In Greece Is Super
Parga & Kreta (Crete) Greece By Lars Didricksson Via Flickr: Sunbathing And Swimming In Greece Is Super
Parga & Kreta (Crete) Greece By Lars Didricksson Via Flickr: Sunbathing And Swimming In Greece Is Super
Parga & Kreta (Crete) Greece By Lars Didricksson Via Flickr: Sunbathing And Swimming In Greece Is Super
Parga & Kreta (Crete) Greece By Lars Didricksson Via Flickr: Sunbathing And Swimming In Greece Is Super
Parga & Kreta (Crete) Greece By Lars Didricksson Via Flickr: Sunbathing And Swimming In Greece Is Super

Parga & Kreta (Crete) Greece by Lars Didricksson Via Flickr: Sunbathing and swimming in Greece is super and the food is fantastic.

Crete, the largest island of Greece has some of the most beautiful places of all of Greece to visit as a tourist. This includes the ancient site of Knossos, its crystal clear beaches and its delicious food and non stop nightlife.


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1 year ago

Prehistoric "girl power".

Challenging prehistoric gender roles: Research finds that women were hunters, too
phys.org
It's a familiar story to many of us: In prehistoric times, men were hunters and women were gatherers. Women were not physically capable of h

It's a familiar story to many of us: In prehistoric times, men were hunters and women were gatherers. Women were not physically capable of hunting because their anatomy was different from men. And because men were hunters, they drove human evolution. But that story's not true, according to research by University of Delaware anthropology professor Sarah Lacy, which was recently published in Scientific American and in two papers in the journal American Anthropologist. Lacy and her colleague Cara Ocobock from the University of Notre Dame examined the division of labor according to sex during the Paleolithic era, approximately 2.5 million to 12,000 years ago. Through a review of current archaeological evidence and literature, they found little evidence to support the idea that roles were assigned specifically to each sex. The team also looked at female physiology and found that women were not only physically capable of being hunters, but that there is little evidence to support that they were not hunting.

Continue Reading.


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2 years ago
Cats In Glasses Moodboard
Cats In Glasses Moodboard
Cats In Glasses Moodboard
Cats In Glasses Moodboard
Cats In Glasses Moodboard
Cats In Glasses Moodboard
Cats In Glasses Moodboard
Cats In Glasses Moodboard
Cats In Glasses Moodboard

cats in glasses moodboard

7 years ago

My bloke and his brother are crazy for KI⚡⚡. I can't see the fascination of guys in makeup.  😆

fionaahutton - Just me

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8 years ago

7 Things You Didn’t Know Came from NASA Technology

Every  year, we publish a round-up of 50 or so NASA innovations that can also be found  in our daily  lives here on Earth.

We call them spinoffs — technologies spun off from America’s space program — and this week the 2017 edition was published.  Here are some of our favorite things we bet you didn’t know use space technology.

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1.Crash Test Cameras 

Parachutes are a key part of the landing system for many of our spacecraft, but before we send them into orbit — or beyond — we have to make sure that they’re going to work as designed. One important component of testing is a video that captures every millisecond as the chute opens, to see if it’s working and if not, what went wrong. 

Integrated Design Tools built a camera for us that could do just that: rugged and compact, it can film up to 1,000 frames per second and back up all that data almost as fast.  Now that same technology is being used to record crash tests, helping ensure that we’re all safer on the roads.

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2.Archaeology 

We often use laser-imaging technology, or lidar, on missions in outer space. Thanks to lidar, snow was discovered on Mars, and the technology will soon help us collect a sample from an asteroid to bring home to Earth. 

To do all that, we’ve helped make smaller, more rugged, and more powerful lidar devices, which have proven useful here on Earth in a lot of ways, including for archaeologists. Lidar scans can strip away the trees and bushes to show the bare earth—offering clues to help find bones, fossils, and human artifacts hidden beneath the surface. 

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3.Golf Clubs 

A screw is a screw, right? Or is it?  

When we were building the Space Shuttle, we needed a screw that wouldn’t loosen during the intense vibrations of launch. An advanced screw threading called Spiralock, invented by the Holmes Tool Company and extensively tested at Goddard Space Flight Center, was the answer.  

Now it’s being used in golf clubs, too. Cobra Puma Golf built a new driver with a spaceport door (designed to model the International Space Station observatory) that allows the final weight to be precisely calibrated by inserting a tungsten weight before the door is screwed on.  

And to ensure that spaceport door doesn’t pop off, Cobra Puma Golf turned to the high-tech threading that had served the Space Shuttle so well. 

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4.Brain Surgery 

Neurosurgery tools need to be as precise as possible.

One important tool, bipolar forceps, uses electricity to cut and cauterize tissue. But electricity produces waste heat, and to avoid singeing healthy brain tissue, Thermacore Inc. used a technology we’ve been relying on since the early days of spaceflight: heat pipes.  The company, which built its expertise in part through work it has done for us over more than 30 years, created a mini heat pipe for bipolar forceps.  

The result means surgery is done more quickly, precisely — and most importantly, more safely.

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5.Earthquake Protection 

The Ares 1 rocket, originally designed to launch crewed missions to the moon and ultimately Mars, had a dangerous vibration problem, and the usual solutions were way too bulky to work on a launch vehicle.  

Our engineers came up with a brand new technology that used the liquid fuel already in the rocket to get rid of the vibrations. And, it turns out, it works just as well with any liquid—and not just on rockets.  

An adapted version is already installed on a building in Brooklyn and could soon be keeping skyscrapers and bridges from being destroyed during earthquakes. 

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6.Fertilizer 

When excess fertilizer washes away into ground water it’s called nutrient runoff, and it’s a big problem for the environment. It’s also a problem for farmers, who are paying for fertilizer the plant never uses. 

Ed Rosenthal, founder of a fertilizer company called Florikan, had an idea to fix both problems at once: coating the fertilizer in special polymers to control how quickly the nutrient dissolves in water, so the plant gets just the right amount at just the right time.  

Our researchers helped him perfect the formula, and the award-winning fertilizer is now used around the world — and in space. 

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7. Cell Phone Cameras  

The sensor that records your selfies was originally designed for something very different: space photography.  

Eric Fossum, an engineer at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, invented it in the 1990s, using technology called complementary metal-oxide semiconductors, or CMOS. The technology had been used for decades in computers, but Fossum was the first person to successfully adapt it for taking pictures. 

As a bonus, he was able to integrate all the other electronics a camera needs onto the same computer chip, resulting in an ultra-compact, energy-efficient, and very reliable imager. Perfect for sending to Mars or, you know, snapping a pic of your meal. 

To learn about NASA spinoffs, visit: https://spinoff.nasa.gov/index.html                                        

8 years ago

Big moon rising.

fionaahutton - Just me
7 years ago
The Sombrero Galaxy

The Sombrero Galaxy

js

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