22 she/her/it/its uwu. photography and more. all of my own are marked with [mine].
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High tide low tide Capricorns
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Lily of the valley
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Mark Johnston (British,b.1974)
Dawn River II, 2024
Oil on panel
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Barn Owls (Tyto alba), family Tytonidae, order Strigiformes, Carrizo Plain National Monument, CA, USA
photograph by Mitch Waters
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Watercolor and ink on paper works by nickbleb
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Two weeks of coming back to say farewell
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The Meeting on the Turret Stairs, by Irish painter Frederic William Burton (1864)
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Jade and striped icebergs. “When seawater at depths of more than 1,200 feet freezes to the underside of massive ice shelves like East Antarctica’s Amery Ice Shelf, it forms ‘marine ice.’ Enormous hunks of ice calve—or break off—from the ice shelf, creating icebergs. When one of these icebergs overturns, its jade underside is revealed. The wondrous color of this ‘marine ice’ results from organic matter dissolved in the seawater at those great depths,” explained Audubon Magazine. “Green icebergs are infrequently seen because their verdant bellies are underwater; it’s only when they flip over, a rare event, that their richly colored regions can be seen before they melt. Striped icebergs, perhaps even more scarce than jade bergs, are thought to form in one of two ways: either meltwater refreezes in crevasses formed atop glaciers before they calve icebergs (creating blue stripes), or seawater freezes inside cracks beneath ice shelves (creating green stripes).”
Photo #14 by Steve Nicol via Australian Antarctic Division
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