Forwarded from Matt Hew
Now that's a f*cking visual https://twitter.com/RARohde/status/1222888656660094979
Twitter
Robert Rohde
It is hard to grasp the enormous scale of human carbon emissions. Since 1850, it is estimated that human activities, such as burning fossil fuels and clearing forests, have released more carbon than is currently present in all the living things on Earth.
Climate change in the Antarctic
A colossus is thawing
If it melts, numerous cities could be flooded: The Thwaites Glacier has an important braking function in the Antarctic. An expedition team is now reporting worrying measurement results.
https://www.spiegel.de/wissenschaft/natur/antarktis-wasser-unter-thwaites-gletscher-wird-immer-waermer-a-bce85715-ae97-4046-aae4-3f22df5ee5c6
A colossus is thawing
If it melts, numerous cities could be flooded: The Thwaites Glacier has an important braking function in the Antarctic. An expedition team is now reporting worrying measurement results.
https://www.spiegel.de/wissenschaft/natur/antarktis-wasser-unter-thwaites-gletscher-wird-immer-waermer-a-bce85715-ae97-4046-aae4-3f22df5ee5c6
Spiegel
Ein Koloss taut auf
Wenn er schmilzt, könnten zahlreiche Städte überflutet werden: Der Thwaites-Gletscher hat eine wichtige Bremsfunktion in der Antarktis. Jetzt meldet ein Expeditionsteam besorgniserregende Messergebnisse.
Paysage d'Italie. Pins parasols
Henner, Jean-Jacques , Peintre
Vers 18591860
3e quart du 19e siècle
Petit Palais, musée des Beaux-arts de la Ville de Paris
Petit Palais Rez-de-Chaussée Salle 25
PPP171
CC0 Paris Musées / Musée des Beaux-Arts de la Ville de Paris, Petit Palais
Peinture
Tableau
Peinture à l'huile
Rome
Dimensions - Œuvre:
Hauteur : 35 cm
Largeur : 27 cm
Henner, Jean-Jacques , Peintre
Vers 18591860
3e quart du 19e siècle
Petit Palais, musée des Beaux-arts de la Ville de Paris
Petit Palais Rez-de-Chaussée Salle 25
PPP171
CC0 Paris Musées / Musée des Beaux-Arts de la Ville de Paris, Petit Palais
Peinture
Tableau
Peinture à l'huile
Rome
Dimensions - Œuvre:
Hauteur : 35 cm
Largeur : 27 cm
This image, and 149 999 others have entered the public domain, under the CCØ licence, thanks to the common work of Paris Musée. Have fun looking through it !
http://parismuseescollections.paris.fr/fr/recherche/image-libre/true/epoque-periode/epoque-contemporaine-1790-a-nos-jours-216627/denominations/tableau-166676?page=1&solrsort=ds_created%20desc&text=
http://parismuseescollections.paris.fr/fr/recherche/image-libre/true/epoque-periode/epoque-contemporaine-1790-a-nos-jours-216627/denominations/tableau-166676?page=1&solrsort=ds_created%20desc&text=
Forwarded from Daily Science to all
ScienceAlert - Latest
How Do Woodpeckers Survive Repeated High-Impact Shocks Without Brain Injury?
➖ @sciencetoall ➖
How Do Woodpeckers Survive Repeated High-Impact Shocks Without Brain Injury?
➖ @sciencetoall ➖
ScienceAlert
How Do Woodpeckers Survive Repeated High-Impact Shocks Without Brain Injury?
Slamming a beak against the trunk of a tree would seem like an activity that would cause headaches, jaw aches and serious neck and brain injuries. Yet woodpeckers can do this 20 times per second and suffer no ill effects.
A Prairie Flower That Flourishes With Fire
Research over two decades on prairie land in western Minnesota shows how controlled burns encouraged a plant to generate seeds.
Purple coneflowers, also known as echinacea angustifolia, produce more seeds in years following fires, the new study shows, not just because there are fewer competitors for resources, but because a fire “also changes the mating opportunities,” said Stuart Wagenius, a conservation scientist at the Chicago Botanic Garden. Dr. Wagenius, who led the research, tracked a 40-hectare plot, or nearly 100 acres, of prairie land in Minnesota for 21 years as part of the Echinacea Project.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/27/science/fire-coneflowers-echinacea-pollination.html
http://echinaceaproject.org/
Research over two decades on prairie land in western Minnesota shows how controlled burns encouraged a plant to generate seeds.
Purple coneflowers, also known as echinacea angustifolia, produce more seeds in years following fires, the new study shows, not just because there are fewer competitors for resources, but because a fire “also changes the mating opportunities,” said Stuart Wagenius, a conservation scientist at the Chicago Botanic Garden. Dr. Wagenius, who led the research, tracked a 40-hectare plot, or nearly 100 acres, of prairie land in Minnesota for 21 years as part of the Echinacea Project.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/27/science/fire-coneflowers-echinacea-pollination.html
http://echinaceaproject.org/
NY Times
A Prairie Flower That Flourishes With Fire
Research over two decades on prairie land in western Minnesota shows how controlled burns encouraged a plant to generate seeds.
Forwarded from Communalist Commune (Koro / Josephine 🖤🌙)
Twitter
Inst. Social Ecology 🌺
And cultivating that garden is an act of defiance.