1. martinlkennedy:

    ‘Soyuz - Apollo’ by Alexei Leonov. From the book Visions of Space by David Hardy (1989)

    (via seedmysoul)

     

  2. humanoidhistory:

    Roman Ruins, attributed to Giacomo Caneva, 1860s.

    (Metropolitan Museum of Art)

    (via humanoidhistory)

     

  3. 70sscifiart:

    From Stewart Cowley’s 1979 art collection Spacewreck. More art in this album.  

     

  4. sixpenceee:

    Now You Can Have Pet Jellyfish At Home

    Why get a lava-lamp when you can have a jellyfish tank? Florida company Jellyfish Art, who’s been selling jellyfish aquariums since 2011, has just concluded a successful kickstarter for a 3rd-generation, LED, tank. 330 USD will get you a tank that you set up yourself, with the jellyfish following in the mail the next day.

    Some people were concerned if there’s enough space for the jellyfish. As harsh as it sounds, jellyfish don’t have a traditional central nervous system, and are probably not aware whether they’re in an ocean or in a fish tank.

    “If they get close to a filtration intake in a regular fish tank, they would get sucked in and badly mangled,” the team explained to Huffington Post. “They’re made up of over 90% water so they’re very delicate. The water flow in the tank is designed to have a very gentle outflow spread out over a large surface area. Our design is the first commercially available cylindrical design.” (Source)

    (via sixpenceee)

     

  5. cool-critters:

    Radiated tortoise (Astrochelys radiata)

    The radiated tortoise is a species in the family Testudinidae. Although this species is native to and most abundant in southern Madagascar, it can also be found in the rest of this island, and has been introduced to the islands of Réunion and Mauritius. As the radiated tortoises are herbivores, grazing constitutes 80-90% of their diets, while they also eat fruits and succulent plants. These tortoises are rated as critically endangered by the IUCN, mainly because of the destruction of their habitat by humans and because of poaching.

    photo credits: Kyle Bedell, Hectonichus, Olivier Lejade

    (via cyan-biologist)

     

  6. zooophagous:

    bijoux-et-mineraux:

    Rare Cretaceous Gastropod epigenized in Dendritic Agate - Betul, India 

    holy shit

    (Source: le-comptoir-geologique.com, via seedmysoul)

     

  7. startswithabang:

    Mystery Solved: How Young Stars Appear In Old Clusters

    “But surprisingly, bluer, brighter, hotter stars often appear in these older clusters anyway! Even in cases where there’s no evidence of a recent star-forming event, these blue straggler stars can frequently be found. For a long time, we thought the occasional merger of two low-mass stars gave rise to a heavier, blue star. But there’s an alternative.”

    When stars are born, it normally happens in groups of thousands or more, all at once. They range from just 8% the mass of our Sun, which are dim, red, and long-lived, to dozens or even hundreds of times as massive: the brightest, bluest and shortest-lived stars of all. Because they burn through their fuel the fastest, these most massive stars cease to exist the most quickly. Yet even in the oldest star clusters available for study, stars that are blue and bright still appear! These blue stragglers were once thought to form from the merger of smaller, redder stars, but two recent studies now suggest an alternative: these stars are formed when one star siphons material off of a binary companion, increasing its own mass and creating a dead white dwarf out of its neighbor.

    (via zetahybridprogram)

     

  8. bundyspooks:

    UFOs in old artwork- Many theories exist as to why a lot of old canvases appear to depict spaceships in the background. Some people think that it was the artist’s creative attempt to decorate an accidental splash of paint, or they were simply using their imagination to create something unusual that would grab the public’s attention. However a more disturbing theory is that these artists actually saw UFOs, and were painting what they witnessed. The paintings above are just some of the ones that show clear evidence that alien life may have existed centuries ago, if not now. They are certainly hard to explain, and the true identity of these sci-fi looking additions remains a mystery.

    (via zetahybridprogram)

     

  9. nigra-lux:

    DORÉ, Gustave (1832-1883)

    Illustration for The Rime of the Ancient Mariner by Samuel Taylor Coleridge
    1866
    Engraving
    Ed. Orig. Lic. Ed.

    (via odium-odium-odium)

     

  10. thescifiend:

    Marine Xenomorph by Wayne Barlowe

    (via odium-odium-odium)

     

  11. suzani:

    A traditional Nogai tent  (nomadic Turkic people from the North Caucasus Region), circa 1920. Tent decoration with handwoven rugs.

    (Source: etsy.com, via beneathstygianpyramids)

     

  12. museum-of-artifacts:

    Armor piercing shell from a 17-pdr gun embedded in a section of armor from a Tiger I tank

    (via goddessoftheblackcoast)

     

  13. saveflowers1:

    Art by Hilda Cowham (c 1920), Fairies.

    (via rollership)

     

  14. thunderstruck9:

    Josef Stoitzner (Austrian, 1884-1951), Farmer’s garden. Oil on canvas, 56 x 78 cm.

    (via azertip)

     

  15. nemfrog:

    Solar prominence. “Double reversal of  C-line (photgraphed) .” The sun. 1895.

    (via nemfrog)