witchydarling:
“I was not prepared for this…
”
😭😭😭😭 amazing

witchydarling:

I was not prepared for this…

😭😭😭😭 amazing

atomstargazer:
“ Science enthusiasm in kids and teenagers, more two stories of year 2012 | Picture edited via Sci-Tech
10-Year-Old Accidentally Creates New Molecule in Science Class
“ Clara Lazen is the discoverer of tetranitratoxycarbon, a molecule...

atomstargazer:

Science enthusiasm in kids and teenagers, more two stories of year 2012 | Picture edited via Sci-Tech

10-Year-Old Accidentally Creates New Molecule in Science Class

Clara Lazen is the discoverer of tetranitratoxycarbon, a molecule constructed of, obviously, oxygen, nitrogen, and carbon. It’s got some interesting possible properties, ranging from use as an explosive to energy storage. Lazen is listed as the co-author of a recent paper on the molecule. But that’s not what’s so interesting and inspiring about this story. What’s so unusual here is that Clara Lazen is a ten-year-old fifth-grader in Kansas City, MO.

Kenneth Boehr, Clara’s science teacher, handed out the usual ball-and-stick models used to visualize simple molecules to his fifth-grade class. But Clara put the carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen atoms together in a particular complex way and asked Boehr if she’d made a real molecule. Boehr, to his surprise, wasn’t sure. So he photographed the model and sent it over to a chemist friend at Humboldt State University who identified it as a wholly new but also wholly viable chemical.

Sixteen-year-old Azza Abdel Hamid Faiad has found that an inexpensive catalyst could be used to create $78 million worth of biofuel each year. Egypt’s plastic consumption is estimated to total one million tons per year, so Azza’s proposal could transform the country’s economy, allowing it to make money from recycled plastic.
What Azza proposes is to break down the plastic polymers found in drinks bottles and general waste and turn them into biofuel feedstock. (This is the bulk raw material that generally used for producing biofuel.) It should be noted that this is not a particularly new idea, but what makes Azza stand out from the crowd is the catalyst that she is proposing. She says that she has found a high-yield catalyst called aluminosilicate, that will break down plastic waste and also produce gaseous products like methane, propane and ethane, which can then be converted into ethanol.

Speaking about the breakthrough, Azza said that the technology could “provide an economically efficient method for production of hydrocarbon fuel” including 40,000 tons per year of cracked naptha and 138,000 tons of hydrocarbon gasses – the equivalent of $78 million in biofuel.

(via blessphemy)

jaanfe:
“Very cool
”
I literally just read this entire list and said “no” very quietly after each one

jaanfe:

Very cool

I literally just read this entire list and said “no” very quietly after each one

(via beyonceprivilege-deactivated201)

blackdenimjeans:
“ Marsha P Johnson
”

blackdenimjeans:

Marsha P Johnson

(via kroove)

asker

Anonymous asked: So by your logic the KKK are evil white men and shouldn't exist? I agree with you, with that logic lets disband the Black Panthers because they too are also a hate group with a history of attacking other ethnic groups.

queerlyblack:

The KKK murdered at least 3,446 people. Those are just the recorded deaths. There are 44 states with active chapters. They’re a terror organization, not a hate group.

The Black Panthers killed 0 people, had 65 community programs, and were disbanded in 1986 after it’s members were assasinated and falsely imprisoned by the US government. But yeah, go ahead and keep pulling ahistorical “facts” out of your ass. I’m sure you and your hooded brothers talk about the Black Panthers at every meeting. 

thebeatleswereterrible:

alphajade:

sonadowhell:

ive been rickrolled twice today

i’m sorry to ruin your fun but i read a post a while back on why that song is very offensive. they say it better than i can so here you go
if any of this is problematic let me know uww

thats really informative  woah. didnt think rick ashley was that kind of scum.

(via moonry)

scarlettjane22:
“German Horse in Snow
saamaanthaa_2010
http://s976.photobucket.com/
”

scarlettjane22:

German Horse in Snow

saamaanthaa_2010

http://s976.photobucket.com/

(via orcababie)

worldofthecutestcuties:
“Local dairy barn posted a picture of their newest baby. Had to keep her warm!
”

worldofthecutestcuties:

Local dairy barn posted a picture of their newest baby. Had to keep her warm!

(via kimojunk)

glownshowpony:
“travelling-my-little-pony:
“ Minty meets a few more Dartmoor ponies - and the weather has warmed up just a little bit so that most of the snow has gone.
In Devon, England.
”
New friend!
”

glownshowpony:

travelling-my-little-pony:

Minty meets a few more Dartmoor ponies - and the weather has warmed up  just a little bit so that most of the snow has gone.

In Devon, England.

New friend!

(via glownshowpony)

actuallyagentcarolina:
“ sometimes i try to draw serious things but then i give up and draw sparkly ponies instead
”

actuallyagentcarolina:

sometimes i try to draw serious things but then i give up and draw sparkly ponies instead

(via orcababie)

Oh man, oh man, oh man
You know I wish I had it all [x]

I love you!!!!! I love you!!!!!! I love you x one million!!!!! 👏👏👏

Why hasn’t there been a new gravity falls ep in the past ten years

moreanimalia:
“The hooded crow (Corvus cornix) is closely related to the carrion crow, which until recently was regarded as the same species. In areas where the two species overlap there may be some interbreeding with hybrids showing a mixed grey and...

moreanimalia:

The hooded crow (Corvus cornix) is closely related to the carrion crow, which until recently was regarded as the same species. In areas where the two species overlap there may be some interbreeding with hybrids showing a mixed grey and black body plumage. Like carrion crows, hoodies also feed on dead animals. Unlike crows they can be more sociable in the feeding habits and groups of them may be seen together in fields [x]

Crow by Jyrki Salmi on Flickr.

(via orcababie)