newt-and-salamander
newt-and-salamander
I really really like birds.
3K posts
🦎 Artemis (she/her) - 'Nuthatch_in_a_Nutshell' on Ao3 🖤🩶🤍💜🦎 History enthusiast, nature enjoyer, overtheoriser and overthinker in her 20s 🦎This is my main - a random collection of everything I find interesting and amusing - nature, animals, history, etc. I post about Sherlock Holmes on my side account, @I-dont-talk-for-days-on-end 🦎 Header image is Duria Antiquior by geologist Henry de la Beche depicting life in ancient Dorset based on fossils found by Mary Anning 🦎 This once was a Fantastic Beasts blog, but I am absolutely disgusted by JKR and her views and I do NOT support her! Non-binary identities are valid and trans rights are human rights!
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
newt-and-salamander · 14 hours ago
Text
Tumblr media
69K notes · View notes
newt-and-salamander · 14 hours ago
Text
Tumblr media
3K notes · View notes
newt-and-salamander · 17 hours ago
Text
23K notes · View notes
newt-and-salamander · 17 hours ago
Text
Tumblr media
my ancient mama
59K notes · View notes
newt-and-salamander · 17 hours ago
Text
Tumblr media
24K notes · View notes
newt-and-salamander · 18 hours ago
Text
Tumblr media
Southern Cassowary (Casuarius casuarius), father with chick, family Casuariidae, order Casuariiformes, northern QLD, Australia
Photograph by Robert Tidey
5K notes · View notes
newt-and-salamander · 18 hours ago
Text
31K notes · View notes
newt-and-salamander · 1 day ago
Text
Tumblr media
213K notes · View notes
newt-and-salamander · 2 days ago
Text
150 years ago, a boy was born to my great-great grandmother. And that was the last time that happened anywhere on my maternal line until my son was born in 2016. This is a story about intersex people.
For 150 years, the women of my family kept having daughters, who either also had daughters, or they were oddly unable to have children. Strange quirk, we assumed. No boys.
In the late 1970s, my mother’s sister had a daughter with Down Syndrome. Genetic testing was done, and it was discovered that although she looked female, she actually possessed the male XY chromosome combination. Her sister was born three years later. And because of that genetic concern, her genes were checked. And she possessed … the XY chromosomes. A third daughter, born a few years later, possessed the usual XX.
Keeping in the tradition, my mother had two daughters. Because of our cousins’ genetic conditions, my sister and I were both checked. Both of us appeared typically XX. And so for more than thirty years, it was dismissed as a quirk, and no one said the word intersex because that wasn’t a thing in 1980.
In 2014 I had a son, breaking the chain of girls. It was an interesting story! I then had two daughters, and didn’t bother to do any genetic checking.
And then in 2020 my sister became pregnant. Early genetic testing said boy, XY. Twenty week anatomy scan said girl. Definitely 100% girl. Uhhh?! As expected, she*** was born genetically male, possessing only male gonads in the form of undescended testes, but female external genitalia.
It was Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome, a genetic mutation carried on the X chromosome. See, all bodies start female. Then, when the hormonal influence of the Y chromosome kicks in, instructions on the X are supposed to detect the testosterone and create male genitalia. Except a person with AIS is non-reactive to testosterone, and the body stays, at least superficially, female. Genetic check would say boy. Presence of testes says boy. Pants check says girl. Making the question of sex (sex. Gender is something else, ok?) distinctly complicated.
If someone has a mother who is a carrier of AIS, there are 4 possibilities. Unaffected XY, and so genetically and structurally male. Affected XY, and so intersex. Affected XX, and so a female carrier. Unaffected XX female and entirely unaffected.
My grandmother was a carrier. My aunt and mother are carriers. My sister is a carrier. When my niece was born, my single non-intersex cousin and I did genetic testing. And we are both carriers as well. My son is an unaffected XY male. My niece is affected XY intersex. Both my cousin and I also have 2 daughters each. And, because it is medically and psychologically relevant, we had them tested. All XX.****
And I was ready to check one more thing: are my daughters carriers? There is a 50/50 chance. And then I stopped, because they are preschoolers, and that is their reproductive decision. They know three intersex people. And if they care, someday they can check their genes and the odds that my grandchildren will be intersex. The intersex people they know will, I hope, be able to talk to them about the beauty of their lives as one of the wonderful variations of humanity.
Tumblr media
25K notes · View notes
newt-and-salamander · 2 days ago
Text
"love is what makes us human" actually it's 'select all images with boat' but go off I guess
134K notes · View notes
newt-and-salamander · 3 days ago
Text
I took my little brother (autistic, mostly non verbal) out and he was using his voice keyboard to tell me something, and this little boy (maybe 4 or 5?) heard him and asked me "Is he a robot??" I tried to explain to him that no, he isn't a robot, he just communicates differently, but my darling brother was in the background max volume "I am robot I am robot I am robot I am robot"
112K notes · View notes
newt-and-salamander · 3 days ago
Text
shaking women by their shoulders with all my strength, screaming YOU DONT NEED TO GET PERMISSION TO BREAK UP WITH SOMEONE!!!!
24K notes · View notes
newt-and-salamander · 3 days ago
Text
Tumblr media
60K notes · View notes
newt-and-salamander · 4 days ago
Text
Tumblr media
The plains spadefoot (Spea bombifrons) is toadally cute. But did you know that this stout amphibian, which inhabits arid regions of western North America, is an “explosive” breeder? Hundreds of individuals gather en masse to mate. Afterwards, females can lay as many as 2,000 eggs! These eggs might hatch in as few as two days, and the resulting tadpoles can develop rapidly, sometimes maturing in just 13 days. This species reproduces after warm heavy rains.
Photo: Andrew DuBois, CC BY-NC 2.0, flickr
4K notes · View notes
newt-and-salamander · 5 days ago
Text
it is so important that you are a little bit ugly. please get comfortable with having unplucked eyebrows and nonexistent jawlines and wrinkles. let your blue hair grow out into an uneven pale green and your clothes be old and mend them and modify them until they’re unique to you. wear lipstick which doesnt compliment your skintone and mismatched outfits which went out of fashion 5 years ago. be a little bit too loud and a little bit too passionate and as weird as you can be because oh my god there is nothing more disturbing to me than perfection. beauty is manufactured and sold to us and you need to realise that you are a fucking animal to live a joyful life I am so serious. you cant obsess over aesthetics forever please just live messily and make your body your home however you please.
if you dont do it for you, do it for all the teenagers who will see u in the street and know that they are not obligated to be attractive
32K notes · View notes
newt-and-salamander · 5 days ago
Text
Tumblr media
255K notes · View notes
newt-and-salamander · 6 days ago
Text
Tumblr media
My mom left an eviction notice for the carpenter bees burrowing into our porch
69K notes · View notes