This had me laughing
Paging all squad members, your Lieutenant and Sergeant require your presence! SVU OG’s Mariska Harigtay and Ice T will be taking your questions before the season 20 premiere. Our Answer Time will take place on Thursday, September 27 at 12 pm PT / 3 pm ET so check back then!
➡️ Submit your questions here: nbcsvu.tumblr.com/ask
Best harbour in the world.
Hey Australia, The 5th Wave is out now on Blu-ray, DVD & digital.
I could do with some of that right now. lol.
Big moon rising.
Prehistoric "girl power".
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.
The Aral Sea was once the fourth-largest lake in the world. Fed primarily by snowmelt and precipitation flowing down from faraway mountains, it was a temperate oasis in an arid region. But in the 1960s, the Soviet Union diverted two major rivers to irrigate farmland, cutting off the inland sea from its source. As the Aral Sea dried up, fisheries collapsed, as did the communities that depended on them. The remaining water supply became increasingly salty and polluted with runoff from agricultural plots. Loss of the Aral Sea’s water influenced regional climate, making the winters even colder and the summers much hotter.
While seasonal rains still bring water to the Aral Sea, the lake is roughly one-tenth of its original size. These satellite images show how the Aral Sea and its surrounding landscape has changed over the past few decades.
For more details about these images, read the full stories here: https://go.nasa.gov/2PqJ1ot
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com
The Sombrero Galaxy
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Finally made it. 🐈
Maru conquers swing. [video]