Who knew talking about your research to 16-18 year olds could be so daunting? Thanks for having me @nhm-london.bsky.social π
Who knew talking about your research to 16-18 year olds could be so daunting? Thanks for having me @nhm-london.bsky.social π
Glad someone called me out for Bing.. it is my default browser, promise iβll work on fixing that..!
Whenever I get writers block in my PhD I find it INCREDIBLY helpful to switch to pen and paper instead of typing. The ideas flow like wine and I donβt get distracted by silly Bing adverts. Anyone else? π
Thanks Jens! That looks interesting, and love the underwater world immersion section.
The Box, Plymouth: Snaps from Planet Ocean; Land, Sea and Sky; 100 Journeys π³πΈπ°οΈ
Ooo I need one of these!
Now that I'm on here, I can start shouting about all the exciting things I've been up to! Like the Archaeological Ephemera project at the Petrie Museum - looking at the bits and bobs left behind by early archaeologists and museum workers, the stories they can tell us, and what to do with them.
This is your reminder to get a library card. They have so many services and basically all of them are free.
A roughly circular cloud of gas and dust with complex structure. The inner shell is made of bright pink and orange filaments studded with clumps and knots that look like tiny pieces of shattered glass. Around the exterior of the inner shell, there are curtains of wispy gas that look like campfire smoke. Around and within the nebula, various stars are seen as points of blue and white light. Outside the nebula, there are also clumps of dust, coloured yellow in the image.
High definition image of a dead star.
This is Cassiopeia A, a star that died 320 years ago.
This image was presented today on AAS Nova (ApJL).
aasnova.org/2024/11/12/t...
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A gorgeously rectangular sheep, photographed in black and white.
this sheep is how being on @bsky.app feels