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#Humboldt Life
valhikes · 1 year
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Eel River Wildlife Area, California
It continued to be a moody day as I explored Mosley Island, part of the Cannibal Island Unit of the Eel River Wildlife Area.
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dailycephalopods · 10 months
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May I humbly request the Humboldt squid?
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Daily Cephalopod #149
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hailieshapedbox · 7 months
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CHERRY GAS
MAVEN GENETICS
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steakkid · 1 month
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went to the seaside the other day and made some drawings that i kinda hate
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It seems so! Though from what I understand it's not as strong as from an animal or human source, so you end up needing more plant matter and to do more refinement, but people will still grow these hybrid healing plants at home for minor injuries and wounds. I've heard of people growing a variety hybridized with mint since it's very hardy and easy to spread. It just can be a little difficult to get your hands on one of these plants in my time. You either get ones that are more difficult to keep alive but do a better job of healing or you get hardier plants but the healing factor isn't as strong.
Though before all the science was going towards the... whole.... parasite... thing... I'd heard they were trying to see if they could use mushrooms too, seeing as the healing factor seemed to mess with the chlorophyll of plants, but if they can get it to work with mushrooms there's no chlorophyll to effect!
Maybe looking into either avenue could be beneficial!
-🦖
(I love science fiction, I love theoretical science, I love science that may someday become reality, I love youuuuu。・:*:・(✿◕3◕)❤)
Mod B: I'm not a huge fan of sci-fi, especially sci-fi that takes place in space or on other plants, but man do I adore some speculative biology!
Ludwig watches you carefully as you talk, nodding along in certain moments, "Mhm, I see. That is all very fascinating. I will have to look into this myself, maybe I'll manage to start the research process for such plants earlier in this timeline than in your original one. I will have to bring back one of these plants with me when we go to the future." He bounces Maria on his knee a bit, looking around himself for something to write on.
#Lutz and Misha#tf2#tf2 ask blog#tf2 medic#tf2 ocs#🦖 anon#sue me i took your previous ask & ran with it#I HAVE CREATED THE HUMBOLDT-NABOKOV FAMILY LINE!#so basically the line continues with maria whos wife gets pregnant using the bone marrow technique & emil helped with that#maria & her wife have a son while in their 30s (120 years before tala) named albrecht who looks like a mini ludwig#albrecht lives until his sixties before marrying & having a child (but physically looks to be around 45-48 as all all od ludwig's#descendants inherited his self-heal & his slower aging)#so albrecht has his daughter sasha around 60 years before tala comes to the past#albrecht grew up to become a doctor like his uncle emil but sasha (who turned out to be trans but kept the name sasha) decided to go down#the mercenary route#sasha had twins named kira & ada 30 years before tala went back to the past#kira is a splitting image of ludwig & is a doctor while ada looks like a genderbent mikhail & stuck to their father's mercensry life#kra & ada are still alive during talas time but sasha died during a mission trying to clesr out zombies from a safe zone#so that is 4 generations aftee mikhail & ludwig & since the humboldt-nabokovs live so long they also know who their ancestors are#& i believe that kira was the one to popularise the use of plant matter for the healinf fluid usinf her great great grandfather ludwig's#research that was later continued by great geandfather emil but not picked up by grandfather albrecht for reasons unknown
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dissolveyourfilter · 1 year
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memories
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fuzzyspiderpawz · 2 years
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Shoutout to deep sea cephalopods
gotta be one of my favorite genders
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feudaldoodle · 9 months
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Day five of posting my photography 📷
Humboldt Penguins at the Sea Life Centre in Weymouth, England.
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hunterbloodknight · 1 year
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Happy Birthday Scream King
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coffeebooksandmore · 1 year
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“The dream of my life is to lie down by a slow river and stare at the light in the trees – to learn something by being nothing.”— Mary Oliver
IG:coffeeandbookss
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penguinonfire · 7 months
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Ocean critters part 1 : aurora the octopus.
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catmint1 · 6 months
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The most dangerous worldview is the worldview of those have not viewed the world.
—Alexander von Humboldt, Works of Alexander von Humboldt
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dailycephalopods · 1 year
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Daily Cephalopod #28
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if-you-fan-a-fire · 2 years
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“Gunman's Heroism in 'Plane Crash Brings Light Prison Sentence,” Toronto Star. February 27, 1933. Page 17.  ---- Prince Albert, Sask., Feb. 27.- Hero of an aeroplane crash which took the life of Pilot W. A. Spence, and so injured Mechanic W. L. Cooke, he will fly no more, Buster Whiteway, 27, who rescued his Mounted Police escort from the wreck, was sentenced to six months in prison on a charge of armed robbery. 
He had been a fugitive from justice since September when he and two others robbed a store near Humboldt. Whiteway held the gun covering Paul Herbert shopkeeper,  while the other two bound and gagged him. They took $100 and a quantity of clothing. Whiteway was caught at Berens river, northern Manitoba, on Jan. 7. His sentence was dated to start then.
He was being brought out by aeroplane to face the charge when the crash occurred. Whiteway was the first to recover from the shock and, in spite of a broken ankle, rescued his escort, Corporal R. Greaves, of the Mounted Police, and a prospector named John Robinson. Leaving them to look after themselves in bitter cold weather, he dragged himself around the bend of the lake to a fishing camp, where ald was found for the three injured men.
Pilot Spence was killed outright. Cooke dragged himself from under Spence's body and froze his fingers in doing so. Later the fingers on both hands and part of his thumbs were amputated. . 
"You have good stuff in you,' Magistrate Lussier said when sentencing Whiteway. "You should not have associated with such rascals. While indirectly you were responsible for the pilot's death, yet you saved the lives of three men who would undoubtedly have frozen to death had you not brought help." 
Inspector Montizambert expressed appreciation of the Mounted Police for the fine spirit Whiteway had this escort, Corporal R. Greaves of shown in obtaining help,
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plaguedocboi · 8 months
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Bottomless Pits
We post holes here, sir.
Sinkholes, pit caves, wells and cenotes all have one thing in common; sometimes they’re bottomless. Not truly “bottomless”, of course, but in appearance, reputation, or of incredible depth. We’ve seen a few of these “bottomless pits” in prior lists such as the Lost Sea in Tennessee or the Devil’s Hole in Nevada, but today we will focus on those strange places in the earth that seem to be endless.
1. Laguna Kaan Luum, Mexico
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This one threw me for a loop because I was originally only seeing pictures like the one above, so I was like ‘oh, that’s cool, so it’s kinda like Dean’s Blue Hole, where it’s an ocean sinkhole right off the shore…’
No. It’s not that. Let’s zoom out a bit.
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Yeah. This is a lake with one giant sinkhole in the middle! It’s about 2,000 feet across and reaches depths of 278 feet, with the surrounding shallows a very pleasant 4 feet deep! I’m mostly including it on the list because the full image hit me like a bus.
2. Sima Humboldt, Venezuela
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Tepuis are large plateau mountains found across Venezuela, often with sheer sides and inaccessible tops that inspired explorers to imagine dinosaurs still surviving on these isolated mesas. Even on their own, tepuis are incredible, beautiful and mysterious. Add a sinkhole with an even more isolated forest at the bottom, and you have all the ingredients for some crazy shit to happen. Sima Humboldt and Sima Martel are two enormous sinkholes at the top of Cerro Sarisariñama. Humboldt is the largest at over a thousand feet across and nearly the same in depth, with a jungle flourishing at the bottom. The sinkhole forests are home to many endemic species of both plant and animals, but so far, no prehistoric monsters have been found in any of them.
3. Well of Barhout, Yemen
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The “well of hell” is a massive sinkhole in the desert, measuring about 100 feet in diameter and plunging down over 300 feet. Understandably, there are many myths and legends about this place, including a story about an evil djinn which lives at the bottom and takes the head of anyone foolish enough to climb in. In fact, so pervasive are these legends that the sinkhole was only formally explored in 2021! Luckily they did not find any evil spirits, but they did find stalagmites which reached 30 feet tall, cave pearls, and waterfalls which provided refuge for frogs and snakes.
4. Myakka sinkhole, Florida
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This murky abyss is filled with more than just water, it is also home to over a hundred alligators. Due to the poor visibility and very high concentration of large carnivores, it is very difficult to study this pit. Only a few people have ever glimpsed the bottom of this 134-foot deep sinkhole, but apparently we aren’t missing much because the water down there is stagnant and inhospitable to most life. Exactly why this area is so popular among alligators is still unknown, but it’s likely due to a combination of food availability and ideal temperatures.
5. The Pit cenote, Mexico
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Like Cenote Angelita, The Pit is a layered cenote. The first 88 feet is freshwater, then there is a “fog” of hydrogen sulfide, below which lies over 300 feet of brackish water. The Pit is a spectacular-looking cenote, with an almost otherworldly quality, which makes it very popular among divers. So far, this pit has been explored to a depth of 390 feet, but unexplored passages extend further.
6. Thor’s well, Oregon
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Like a drainpipe continuously swallowing an unbroken stream of ocean water, Thor’s well is often likened to a bottomless pit. However, it is actually only about 20 feet deep, and the drain effect is due to the fact that it connects back to the ocean, not swallowing the water but simply rerouting it. This does not mean that there is no danger, though. The rocks are slippery and sharp, and this area sees a higher than average number of ‘sneaker waves’; waves that look normal as they roll in but are actually much larger than they appear, potentially sweeping people out to sea as they retreat. The true danger here is the ocean, not the well.
7. Vouliagmeni Lake, Greece
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This incredibly beautiful saltwater lake has been rumored to have healing properties for thousands of years, and today continues to draw in visitors for its medicinal minerals and “doctor fish”. But this famous lake hides a secret; a labyrinth of caves whose depths have never been fully explored, and whose connection to the ocean remains undiscovered. Passages stretch over a mile into the mountains, with an average depth of 260 feet. The largest of these caverns is nearly 500 feet wide and full of warm sea water. Although a spectacular diving spot, these unknown caverns are best not underestimated.
8. Santa Rosa blue hole, New Mexico
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A gorgeous natural swimming hole, this cenote is roughly 80 feet wide and 80 feet deep (in most places) and is a popular destination for tourists. It was also used for diving certification tests, until an incident in 1976. There is one spot in this picturesque cenote that goes down much further than 80 feet; the entrance to a cave. In the dark, twisting passages, two young divers got lost and died, and the cave was later sealed with a metal grate to prevent other divers from attempting to enter. The cave was mostly forgotten about until 2013, when cave divers were given permission to attempt to map the area. The blue hole is at least 200 feet deep, but the bottom of the cave still has not been found.
9. Roaring River Spring, Missouri
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This turquoise river bubbles up from a ten-foot wide pool of deep water hidden within a sheer-sided canyon. But despite its peaceful appearance, this spring discharges 20 million gallons of water a day, and the exact source is still unknown. In 1979, divers attempted to map the cave, but reached a point 225 feet down where the passage constricted and had a water flow like “the force of an open fire hydrant”, preventing them from going any further. In 2020, divers waited until the water flow was lowest in the summer and descended to a depth of 472 feet with no bottom in sight, making this the deepest spring in the US!
10. Your Mom.
I jest, of course. Here’s the real one:
Hranice Abyss, Czech Republic
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A tiny greenish lake in the forest is the opening to the deepest freshwater cave in the world, deeper than the Empire State Building is high and still seemingly bottomless. It is so deep that scientists think it may have been formed by a totally different process than most freshwater caves; instead of water eroding away the ground from above, it may have been created by acidic groundwater coming up from below. And this water is extremely acidic, able to burn a diver’s skin if not covered properly. This, combined with fallen trees and other debris, poor visibility, and the sheer vertical drop of the cave, creates incredibly dangerous conditions for diving. Because of this, no diver or ROV has reached the bottom yet. But with a recent study using seismic sensors, scientists have estimated that the abyss may be over a kilometer deep, twice what was previously thought.
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dissolveyourfilter · 3 months
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Adventures in the PNW
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