rvarg007
rvarg007
Trampled Under Foot.
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Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
rvarg007 · 8 years ago
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They Call Me Macho Woman! (1991) 
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rvarg007 · 8 years ago
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Bane couldn’t touch this place.
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rvarg007 · 8 years ago
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rvarg007 · 8 years ago
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Why would Darth Vader advertise a flavor based on the substance that horribly disfigured and crippled him? Unless he’s not so much marketing the pop tarts as popping into the corner really quick just to say “hey man be careful with those trust me”
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rvarg007 · 9 years ago
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rvarg007 · 9 years ago
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We did the face-swap thingy…it’s magnificent.
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rvarg007 · 9 years ago
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rvarg007 · 9 years ago
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5/50 sliders from belly bombz food truck
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rvarg007 · 9 years ago
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Thor by Barry Windsor Smith
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rvarg007 · 9 years ago
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“This is the best Friday.”
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rvarg007 · 10 years ago
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rvarg007 · 10 years ago
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rvarg007 · 10 years ago
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“The war on Christmas”
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rvarg007 · 10 years ago
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The only possible explanation.
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rvarg007 · 10 years ago
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How to Experiment Like Darwin
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The Museum’s library is part of the Darwin Manuscripts Project, which aims to digitize the papers, manuscripts, and correspondence of Charles Darwin. 
Darwin famously held back from publishing his theories on evolution for decades. It wasn’t just his religious scruples that kept Darwin from publishing the details of his ideas about natural selection, though. He needed that time to establish his reputation as a scientist and do the necessary work on his selection theory, developing evidence and preparing to face the objections of critics. To test his theories, Darwin bred pigeons, dissected orchids, and skeletonized rabbits. He spent so much time studying barnacles that his children thought that was just what fathers did; one of the boys reportedly asked a friend, “Where does your father do his barnacles?”
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After publication of On the Origin of Species, Darwin’s days at the family home, Down House, were filled with experiments, often using no more sophisticated equipment than a microscope or a magnifying glass. His notebooks are a wonderful record of the scientific method in practice—raising questions based on his theory and then testing them. The index page shown here, from Darwin’s “Experimental Book” begun in 1855, hints at the breadth of his explorations, dealing with everything from snails to sweet peas, wild cabbages to frog spawn.
Notable for their simplicity, some of his experiments are ideal science lessons for children—for example, his weed plot experiment, which aims to seed what species of weeds, like the dandelions above, are the hardiest. Another looks at the viability of plant seeds that have been soaked in salt water. Detailed instructions for carrying out these experiments, as well as a third on insect-eating plants, can be found in the Schools section ofThe Darwin Correspondence Project.
Learn about Darwin’s family life in Darwin at Home. For more about the origin of the Darwin Manuscripts Project, read Digitizing Darwin’s Work.
This story was originally published on the Museum blog. 
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rvarg007 · 10 years ago
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rvarg007 · 10 years ago
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Beta Ray Bill by Michel Fiffe & George O’Connor
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