“ Old tree stump with grass growing over it on the Faroe Islands kind of looks like a unicorn.
”

Old tree stump with grass growing over it on the Faroe Islands kind of looks like a unicorn.

(via kavvka-deactivated20171211)

sagansense:
“ Humans Aren’t Worst Polluters in History, Not Even Close
If you think humans are polluting the planet to a degree never before seen in history, well, “You’re suffering from a species-level delusion of grandeur,“ insists science writer...

sagansense:

Humans Aren’t Worst Polluters in History, Not Even Close

If you think humans are polluting the planet to a degree never before seen in history, well, “You’re suffering from a species-level delusion of grandeur,“ insists science writer Annalee Newitz in her new book, Scatter, Adapt, and Remember. “We’re not even the first creatures to pollute the Earth so much that other creatures go extinct.” That foul distinction belongs to ancient cousins of ours: cyanobacteria.

About 2.5 billion years ago, the Earth was much different than it is today. Rotating at faster speeds, there were about 450 20-hour days in a year. Far from cool and invigorating, the planet’s atmosphere was superheated, and comprised mostly of methane and carbon, not oxygen and nitrogen, the primary constituents of today’s atmosphere. The surface was no more hospitable to modern life. Magma seeped and bubbled amidst immense, acidic oceans. 2.5 billion years ago, Earth was a hot mess.

But in this environment — one we would deem noxious — life persisted. Oxygen-despising anaerobic bacteria floated in the ocean deep, kept cozy by hot magma streams. They subsisted on simple amino acids and sugars. Earth was turbulent, but alive.

Then cyanobacteria ruined everything. As the first organisms to use photosynthesis, they drank in the oceans’ water and absorbed photons from sunlight, using the energy from those photons to separate water’s two hydrogen molecules from its lone oxygen molecule. Afterwards, the microbes consumed the hydrogen and spit out the oxygen as a waste product.

This recipe was so successful that after millions of years cyanobacteria, also known as blue-green algae, nearly blanketed the planet’s surface, continuously belching boatloads of oxygen in the process. All of the smokestacks from all of today’s factories and power plants couldn’t come close to their polluting prowess.

Eventually, Earth’s natural oxygen absorbers — like iron — became saturated with the gaseous element, and an “oxygen apocalypse" ensued. We recognize oxygen as a bringer of life, but it’s also a powerful degrader of organic compounds and quite toxic to anaerobes. With oxygen now suffusing throughout the atmosphere, pretty much all life except the cyanobacteria gradually became extinct. Excess oxygen also reacted with the atmosphere’s methane, turning it into a weaker greenhouse gas: carbon dioxide. With a diminished ability to retain heat, the planet entered an ice age that lasted upwards of 300 million years!

One thing that this fascinating, true story demonstrates is that one bacteria’s trash is another life form’s treasure. Over many millions of years, organisms evolved that could use the built-up oxygen, mixing it with sugars to create energy. Pollution problem solved.

Of course, there’s also a more humorous and ironic takeaway. Today, we oxygen-breathers are steadily working towards the goal of turning our Earth back into the hot mess that it once was. In 2012, humans emitted 31.6 billion tons of carbon dioxide. We’re also putting more methane into the atmosphere, although at a much slower rate.

Will we ever atone for the dirty sins of our blue-green cousins and give the Earth totally back to the anaerobes? Probably not. It will take a far more concerted pollution effort than the comparatively paltry one we are currently mustering.

This post originally appeared in RealClearScience’s Newton blog.

Primary Source: Scatter, Adapt, and Remember: How Humans Will Survive a Mass Extinction, Annalee Newitz

(Image: Iron Ore Pit via Shutterstock)

by Ross Pomeroy, via bigthink

Curious about this topic? I’m currently working through the final chapters of “Oxygen: The Molecule That Made The World”. Definitely recommended reading for everyone who has ever wondered, “hey, umm…this stuff I’m breathing in…what is it? Where did it come from? And why is it essential for life?” Haha. Oxygen…can’t live with it, (humans) can’t live without it.

(via blessphemy)

for cassidy. a beautiful pony thinking sexy melon thoughts

for cassidy. a beautiful pony thinking sexy melon thoughts

flipspring:

if you ever feel down

just remember that i once put a live hamster on my head

and it peed

sarah i was already planning on getting a hamster next year now i have the added incentive of being able to put it on you head repeatedly to try to recreate this event

suiseiusagi:

veganemelda:

panic-at-the-order-of-the-tardis:

 

Your day just got better and you’re welcome.

This seriously just improved my mood thank you so much <3 <3 <3 :D

(via hispetfoxxie-deactivated2013090)

“ $205 million found in the home of a suspected supplier of meth-precursor chemicals.
”

$205 million found in the home of a suspected supplier of meth-precursor chemicals.

(via fishy-lin)

victorianhouses:

Victorian Houses Best of 2011 posts

(via slipstreamborne)

jtotheizzoe:

via bhagatkapil:

Women in science!

Honouring Marie Curie, Grace Hopper, Rosalind Franklin, Ada Lovelace, Barbara McClintock and Maria Mitchell

Kapil Baghat is at it again! After his previous round of minimalist typographic tributes to great scientists (which were, admittedly, a bit male-centric) took the interwebs by storm, he’s just added this set of women in science.

These are subtle, but truly awesome. If you’d like to buy prints or other stuff featuring Kapil’s work, visit his store and follow him on Tumblr.

(via scishow)

moseby:

dogs will never think about me as much as i think about them

(via iwilleatyourenglish)

glam-pire:
“ kararikue:
“ You NEEDED Mermen of color on your dash, you just didn’t know it.
”
no I did
”

glam-pire:

kararikue:

You NEEDED Mermen of color on your dash, you just didn’t know it.

no I did

(via kimojunk)

sayakassoulgemring:

rt this and ill draw you something with my mouse on paint c;

(via kavvka-deactivated20171211)

octemberfirst:

abqandnotu:

merosse:

TINY TURTLE INVESTIGATORS: THE CASE OF THE LARGE STRAWBERRY

GOOD MORNING EVERYONE

“HAVE YOU TRIED BALANCING ON IT”
“YES OF COURSE I TRIED BALANCING ON IT JENKINS THIS IS NOT MY FIRST DAY AS A TINY TURTLE INVESTIGATOR” 

(via iranawaywiththedoctor-blog)