I watch the bees.

Hello please call me Czaren!
I like artsy things and Supernatural and BBC Sherlock and Avatar(ATLA/TLOK).

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Spree/Serial Killer Andrew Cunanan’s high-school year book page. Most students filled their space with memories, either in text or photographic. Cunanan’s was all but blank with the exception of a quote from the court of Louis XV;

“Apres Moi, Le Deluge”
“After Me, The Storm (or Flood)”

Cunanan was also the killer of famed fashion designer Gianni Versace.

Spree/Serial Killer Andrew Cunanan’s high-school year book page. Most students filled their space with memories, either in text or photographic. Cunanan’s was all but blank with the exception of a quote from the court of Louis XV;

“Apres Moi, Le Deluge”

“After Me, The Storm (or Flood)”

Cunanan was also the killer of famed fashion designer Gianni Versace.


posted 2 weeks ago on 16/5/2012 - 279 notes - via methlabforbooty © daysrunaway

Conan Doyle, You Troll. 

sherlocksupportgroup:

we-think-we-know-you:

theconsultingtimelordofmjn:

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, the creator of Sherlock Holmes, enjoyed practical jokes. He is said to have once sent a telegram to twelve of his friends, all people of great significance and power. The telegram said: ‘Flee at once, the secret is discovered’. Within 24 hours all twelve had left the country. 

Source: http://history.inrebus.com/index.php?category=25


posted 3 weeks ago on 6/5/2012 - 12,678 notes - via markerspasm © bkr-221

tobi2x4:

As an artist, I find this fascinating.


posted 1 month ago on 3/5/2012 - 44,484 notes - via methlabforbooty © luciditysbest

"Since her death in 1979, the woman who discovered what the universe is made of has not so much as received a memorial plaque. Her newspaper obituaries do not mention her greatest discovery. […] Every high school student knows that Isaac Newton discovered gravity, that Charles Darwin discovered evolution, and that Albert Einstein discovered the relativity of time. But when it comes to the composition of our universe, the textbooks simply say that the most abundant atom in the universe is hydrogen. And no one ever wonders how we know."

Jeremy Knowles, discussing the complete lack of recognition Cecilia Payne gets, even today, for her revolutionary discovery. (via alliterate)

From Wikipedia:

She correctly suggested that silicon, carbon, and other common metals seen in the Sun were found in about the same relative amounts as on Earth, but that helium and particularly hydrogen were vastly more abundant (by about a factor of one million in the case of hydrogen). Her thesis thus established that hydrogen was the overwhelming constituent of the stars. When her dissertation was reviewed, she was dissuaded by Henry Norris Russell from concluding that the composition of the Sun is different from the Earth, which was the accepted wisdom at the time. However, Russell changed his mind four years later when other evidence emerged. After Payne-Gaposchkin was proven correct Russell was often given the credit.

Fuck the patriarchy.

(via sailaweigh)


posted 1 month ago on 28/4/2012 - 14,227 notes - via frenchfrai © alliterate
chrismukkah:

out-ofoz:

f0reverawk:

WHAT THIS IS SO CONFUSING



oh dear. sounds like something out of csi or something

chrismukkah:

out-ofoz:

f0reverawk:

WHAT THIS IS SO CONFUSING

oh dear. sounds like something out of csi or something


posted 1 month ago on 28/4/2012 - 102,669 notes - via chrismukkah © brisasmith
wildcat2030:

Manila is one of the world’s five dirtiest cities, but graffiti? That’s not a problem. It’s not that people don’t paint on the walls in the hyper-polluted Philippines capital, because they do. But they do it with a paint that actually eats smog out of the air. The catalytic paint, called Boysen KNOxOUT, reacts with light and water vapor to filter out nitrogen oxides. An environmental scientist interviewed in this BBC video says it can scrub out 20 percent of polluting nitrogen. Manila is deploying the paint in the form of massive murals, which are both beautiful and, because of their size, effective. Eleven square feet of paint-covered surface can absorb as much pollution as a full-grown tree, and these murals are close to 11 THOUSAND square feet. If we could get this stuff into the hands of street artists and taggers, it would be like having an army of energetic teenagers planting trees all over the city all day, every day. (via Super-polluted city tries to clean itself with smog-eating paint | Grist)

wildcat2030:

Manila is one of the world’s five dirtiest cities, but graffiti? That’s not a problem. It’s not that people don’t paint on the walls in the hyper-polluted Philippines capital, because they do. But they do it with a paint that actually eats smog out of the air. The catalytic paint, called Boysen KNOxOUT, reacts with light and water vapor to filter out nitrogen oxides. An environmental scientist interviewed in this BBC video says it can scrub out 20 percent of polluting nitrogen. Manila is deploying the paint in the form of massive murals, which are both beautiful and, because of their size, effective. Eleven square feet of paint-covered surface can absorb as much pollution as a full-grown tree, and these murals are close to 11 THOUSAND square feet. If we could get this stuff into the hands of street artists and taggers, it would be like having an army of energetic teenagers planting trees all over the city all day, every day. (via Super-polluted city tries to clean itself with smog-eating paint | Grist)


posted 1 month ago on 24/4/2012 - 1,553 notes - via frenchfrai © grist.org

aamukherjee:

expose-the-light:

Ingredients of life

Illustrations of Chemical compounds by Rex

An ultra-cool set of posters! Dopamine is the one I am most familiar with and it’s a very interesting chemical not only because it causes our emotional responses, but because it controls the ‘reward system’ of our brain which in turn motivates us to repeat actions that we enjoy (even if they are not good for our overall health, as is the case with chemical addiction).

But rather than dwelling too much on the more serious effects of these chemical responses, focus more on the greatness of the posters!


posted 1 month ago on 23/4/2012 - 59,670 notes - via frenchfrai © expose-the-light

overonehundred:

Toby Ng - The World of 100

Have you ever asked yourself, what would the World look like as a small community of 100 people? Probably not. However, it is something to think about, as the reality would be startling - as much as you’d think so, the village would only have 7 computers, and only 1 person in the World Village would be educated at University level.

These facts are something that designer Toby Ng has thought about very carefully, and turned the results of his findings into a series of twenty infographics depicting ‘The World of 100’. Although aesthetically beautiful, with sharp lines and bold, vibrant colours, these infographics are often horrifying. 

The posters look as though they have come straight out of a children’s book; is this to mirror the naivety of those that are most likely to be looking at them on their computers?

“Look, this is the World we are living in.”

- Toby Ng


posted 1 month ago on 20/4/2012 - 77,256 notes - via janbelmonte © overonehundred
theoncelerfandom:

halb-nichts:

Arthur Conan Doyle was a fucking genius. GENIUS.

thats really cool

theoncelerfandom:

halb-nichts:

Arthur Conan Doyle was a fucking genius. GENIUS.

thats really cool


posted 1 month ago on 4/4/2012 - 11,299 notes - via markerspasm © deastrumquodvicis